The author does not condone pirate broadcasting, nor any other related activities. Pirate transmissions
can interfere with vital communications, such as aircraft and police.

All the plans and schematics have been tested, but the author cannot guarantee their functionality. A
basic knowledge of electronics is assumed. When in doubt, ask an experienced person.

The material in this book is presented for educational purposes only. Read on and enjoy!

I.
Introduction

Pirate broadcasting has been around for a long time, ever since the early days of radio. Recently, it has
gained renewed popularity, as the opportunities in 'legal' broadcasting have declined.

Around the world, shortwave, FM, AM and even television pirate stations have been springing up.
Reasons for building a pirate station are always a little different, from politics, to just having fun.

It does not require great technical skill to start a pirate station. All you need is a lot of enthusiasm, a bit
of time, and maybe a little money. Equipment is readily available from many sources, and you can even
build it yourself.

This book gives several perspectives of pirate broadcasting. Contained within are a collection of stories,
how-to's, and schematics that cover almost every facet of pirate broadcasting, both in the United States,
and in the United Kingdom. There are even hints for creating suitable programs for your pirate
station.

The construction projects in this book have been tested, and will work if you are knowledgeable and
careful in the construction. The projects use relatively common components that are available from many
sources.

Read on, and enjoy Homebrew Broadcasting, a collection of Pirate Radio Techniques. If you have any
projects, stories, or information you wish to contribute for future editions, please feel free to contact the
publisher.

II. The Basics of
Pirate Radio: An Informed Overview

FOREWORD

The following is by no means an in-depth introduction to electronics, there are many such books that
cover the subject, but intends to explore some of the ideas and concept involved in radio broadcasting
that are relevant to the pirate radio operator on VHF FM. In particular we will go a step by step tour of
a typical VHF FM transmitter system starting with the output from the tape recorder or mixer, and
finishing with a brief discussion of aerials. At each stage we will discuss the pros and cons of various
alternatives and additional background info, e.g. the use of equipment will be introduced.

Radio frequency signals have AMPLITUDE and FREQUENCY. The frequency is how fast the
signal is oscillating from one extreme to the other and back again. Frequency is measured in cycles per
second (cp/s), which these days are known as HERTZ (Hz), 1000 Hz = 1 kHz, 1000000 Hz = 1 MHz.
The amplitude is to what extent the signal is oscillating. LEVEL or STRENGTH can be thought of
as meaning the same as amplitude. Amplitude can be measured in Volts (V). There is more than one
way of measuring amplitude.

INTRODUCTION

What we are trying to do is get information from one place to lots of others. I'm using information
here in a wider sense, meaning speech, music, etc., rather than phone numbers local hairdressers or
whatever. Now I'm going to assume we're going to use radio broadcasting to achieve this, which
immediately rules out things like standing on top of tall buildings and shouting out really loud.
We'll also assume we've got this info in the form of an audio frequency signal, i.e. what comes out of a
tape recorder or an audio mixer. You can't transmit audio frequency signals very easily so what we can
do is import the info in the audio frequency signal onto a higher frequency carrier signal. Two ways of
doing this are AMPLITUDE MODULATION and FREQUENCY MODULATION (AM and FM).

In AM the amplitude of the carrier is determined at every instant by the amplitude of the audio
signal, the carrier frequency remains constant. In FM, the frequency of the carrier is determined at
every instant by the amplitude of the audio signal, and the carrier amplitude remains constant.

Frequencies between 30 MHz and 300 MHz are known as Very High Frequencies or VHF. This
corresponds to wavelengths between 10 m and 1 m. To convert between wavelength and frequency
use the formula: Wavelength (in meters)=300 / Frequency (in MHz).

FM

There are two sorts of FM, known as Narrow Band FM (NBFM) and Wideband FM. They differ by
the maximum allowable frequency shift of the carrier when the transmitter is fully modulated. This
frequency shift is known as the DEVIATION. Legal CB radios use NBFM with a maximum deviation
of 3 kHz. Wideband FM is used by the national broadcasting companies for radio broadcasting and for
studio to transmitter links. The standard maximum deviation for FM radio broadcasting in Europe is 75
kHz. There is no simple way to set the deviation of a transmitter without a deviation meter which is an
expensive piece of test gear. Probably the best way to do this is to vary the level of the audio signal
going into the transmitter (TX) and listen on a receiver, until your signal sounds about the same
loudness as the other (legal?) broadcasting stations. If you use too high a deviation you'll use a bigger
than necessary chunk of the radio spectrum and be more likely to cause interference with others, which
will make you even more unpopular with the DTI.

The police use NBFM as well, which is why if you listen to them on an ordinary FM receiver, which is
wideband, you can hear more than one channel at a time.

CHOOSING A FREQUENCY

If your first action could be to reach for your receiver and tune trough looking for a blank space, think
again, for a kick-off the FM broadcast band is 88 to 108 MHz. What stations you can receive is
determined by where you are, as well as by the nature of and positioning of your aerial. If you look our
old friend the Maplin catalogue we find a list of the frequencies and locations of all FM broadcasting
stations. What it doesn't say, of course, is the frequency of existing pirates. TX Magazine gives a good
rundown of these. Armed with this info you should make a list of all frequencies in use in, say, a 50
km radius. If you write to the BBC or IBA's Engineering Info Offices they'll send you service maps of
where their TX's are meant to be able to heard. Then its just a question of finding a big enough gap
between stations, with the proviso that your station shouldn't be nearer than 200 kHz (0.2 MHz) to the
frequency of any existing station. This is no problem as the band is half empty. Also don't choose a
frequency which is 10.7 MHz away from any other station as for complex reasons (which involve the
use of 10.7 MHz as intermediate frequency in FM receivers) reception will be hard for people listening
to you and/or the other station.

Now let's take a little stroll through the whole system.

TAPE OR LIVE

What we are going to feed to our TX? The obvious possibilities are:

A) A tape or cassette player.

B) Live, either directly from the mixer or via some kind of link from studio to TX site (highly
recommended).

TAPE. This is the safest approach in that you can put a tape on and then retire to a safe distance. Links
are now being traced and studios busted, and some of the biggest pirates (e.g. the LWR) are going back
to taped broadcasts. If the DTI trace your transmission and turn up all they can do to confiscate your tape
player, TX and aerial, i.e. no arrests (unless they catch you changing the tape).

Its also the most inflexible alternative as tapes will have to be prepared in advance. Time checks, if
you're into that, will be difficult and live phone ins are right out.

Give a little thought to your choice of tape recorder, as it will probably be the weakest link in terms of
sound quality. In an old clapped out one the heads will be worn flat. Maybe you can use a 'Walkman'
type of player, which are small, can be battery powered and have an OK sound quality and are cheap.
An amateur radio rally I was at recently were selling off very slightly damaged ones for £2 each. To
reduce 'noise' or 'tape hiss' on such recorders, if you're doing programs with quiet passages, you can use
a circuit known as a Dynamic Noise Limiter (DNL), which is placed on the output and cuts off the
'noise' just in quiet pauses. DNLs are sometimes used in the soundtracks of old films. You can find a
DNL circuit in part of the 'Audio Embellisher' project in the Jan. 84 issue of 'Elektor' magazine.

If you want to go upmarket you could use a proper 1/4" reel to tape recorder, though few pirates do. The
latest and greatest is to use 'Stack machines' which will change the tapes for you.

Whatever you use get one that can be battery powered as you may not always have access to mains
power.

MONO OR STEREO

The advantages of mono are that the TX is kept as simple and cheap as possible, and you don't need as
much power as on stereo to get same result. The disadvantages are you don't sound as
professional, quite small pirates are now using Stereo Encoders, and maybe people might dial past
when the red stereo light on their receivers doesn't flash. With stereo the listener can get quality the
same of legal stations. Weigh against this is the extra cost, extra circuitry and more output power
needed for the same signal.

What you need is a STEREO ENCODER, which combines the left and right stereo signals into a
single composite stereo signal which is then fed into your TX.

For those interested a brief description follows. The left (L) and right (R) signals are fed into a
summing and differential amp to get a L+R and L-R signal respectively. The L-R signal is mixed in a
balanced modulator with a 38 kHz sub carrier to produce an amplitude modulated double sideband
suppressed carrier signal. The 38 kHz signal is derived from the same source as the 19 kHz pilot tone.
The composite output is formed by mixing the L+R signal, the sidebands containing the info of the L-R
signal, and a bit of 19 kHz pilot tone. The pilot tone switches on the STEREO DECODER in peoples'
receivers.

Back in the receiver, once the stereo decoder has extracted the L+R and L-R signal the original left
and right signals are easily got by (L+R)+(L-R)=2L (L+R)-(L-R)=2R.

The reason L+R and L-R signals are encoded rather than L and R is so that a mono receiver can just
demodulate the L+R bit and ignore the rest of the signal. If L and R signals were encoded a mono
receiver would only be able to hear the left channel. The 19 kHz pilot tone is usually got from a crystal
oscillator, to be quite accurate and stable. A crystal resonating on 4.8640 MHz is convenient as 4864
divided by 2 eight times is 19. This can easily be done by digital logic chips, but its highly unlikely that
you'll be able to buy a 4.8640 crystal off the shelf, so you'll have to have one made for order.

It doesn't matter if you didn't understand all of the above but one thing is important. The standard
FM broadcast audio bandwidth extends only to 15 kHz and stereo encoders are designed to assume this
figure. If you put signals into them with frequencies above that the L+R signal and the lower side band
of the L-R signal could spread into each other and you will get a right bloody mess.

With a tape recorder you can't really get over 15 kHz, but if you're live its quite possible. In that case
you need a LOW PASS FILTER on each input to a stereo encoder. Maplin has a high quality
design. The pot could be replaced with a 500k resistor to wire the circuit permanently for max. roll off.
If you're using a link between studio and TX and you want stereo you'll have to know the bandwidth of
the link. If its 53 kHz (=38+15) or more you can use it after the encoder.

Otherwise you'll need two links and have to encode at the TX end.

PRE-EMPHASIS

In a typical audio signal the high frequency sounds have less energy than the low ones and so
produce less deviation of the carrier. This in turn makes them susceptible to noise when received.
To avoid this high frequencies are boosted before being transmitted by PRE-EMPHASIS. In the receiver
the frequencies are cut by the same amount by DE-EMPHASIS. So the overall frequency response of
TX to receiver stays flat, but the level of background noise is reduced a lot.

Pre- and de-emphasis networks are characterized by their TIME CONSTANT. In the USA the
standard is 75 us, but in UK its 50 us so anything designed or bought from there needs slight
modification.

In a mono TX the pre-emphasis network can be built into the front end of the exciter. For a stereo TX
such a network must not be in the exciter or it'll play hell with the composite stereo signal from the
encoder. Instead you need 2 networks, one for each channel, on the inputs of the stereo encoder.
They're actually often built into the studio encoder.

COMPRESSORS AND LIMITERS

Compressors and limiters operate on the same principles, but their effects and the reasons for using
them are completely different.

A compressor compresses, it reduces the DYNAMIC RANGE of its input signal. This means as the
input amplitude varies over a certain range, the output amplitude varies only a fraction of that
range.

A limiter passes its signal unchanged till the input amplitude reaches its THRESHOLD. At this
point the limiter prevents the output increasing much by compressing its input much more strongly
than in compressors e.g. 10:1.

Some American music stations and some pirates compress their programs to make it seem louder
and more upfront than other stations. This occurs because the compressor keeps the average level of
the signal high, even in quiet parts of the program. The flip side of this is listeners can soon get 'listener
fatigue' as constant compression can become boring and irritating to the ear, as if the music were
rammed into it!

Compression has other uses, you might compress your program as you transfer it to tape to stop
quieter bits fading into background tape hiss when played. The process of recording and playing
does this to some extent anyway. Don't compress the output of a tape recorder as it'll make tape noise
worse. Guitar effect units, labelled compressors, are unlikely to be much use. Compressors
intended for use in home studio recording are worth experimenting with. A stereo compressor with a
2:1 characteristic can be simply constructed around a NE571 IC.

Limiters are used to stop a signal's amplitude going over a certain level. E.g. when cutting a
master disc in record manufacture, large PA systems at gigs to stop loudspeakers blowing every time
someone burps in a mike and, surprise surprise, in broadcasting. In FM particularly, as the signal level
increases so also does the bandwidth of the transmitted signal, risking interfering with other
stations. With tape input to the TX its different the output is inherently limited by the recording
process, no limiter needed. With live input to the TX its different. Though you might set the levels
right to start, along comes a loud record or voice and you could be interfering with the next station. Use
a limiter.

Any limiters based on 2 back to back diodes is a little more than a guitar fuzz box and will sound like
one. A suitable high quality limiter was described in the May 83 issue of 'Electronics Today'
International Magazine.

THE OSCILLATOR

At the heart of everything is the OSCILLATOR that generates the VHF signal. The frequency of
this is modulated by applying an audio signal to it. The most common way of doing this is using one or
two VARICAP diodes. When a varicap diode is operated with a reverse bias the capacitance of the
diode varies with that bias.

The diode(s) is/are connected to a frequency determining part of the oscillator. The audio signal is
connected across the diode to achieve frequency modulation. Also by varying the DC reverse bias the
oscillator can be fine tuned. The higher the voltage, the lower the capacitance, the higher the
frequency.

The VHF signal can be generated directly, or the oscillator can oscillate on a lower frequency e.g. a
third or half that desired and then followed by a TRIPLER or DOUBLER stage. There are three main
types of oscillator:

a) Variable Frequency Oscillator (VFO)

b) Crystal Oscillator

c) Phase Locked Loop oscillator (PLL)

VFO's

These are simple oscillators which can be built round a single transistor. This can be a Bipolar
Junction Transistor (BJT) or a Field Effect Transistor (FET).

The problem with oscillators based on BJT's is that the frequency is too dependent on the temperature
of the transistor. i.e. a few degrees temperature change will result a significant change in transmitting
frequency. For this reason oscillators based on BJT's are UNSUITABLE for serious use as a TX. FET's
don't suffer from this problem so badly, so they can be used, but you should still bear it in mind.

The FET's will heat itself up slightly, and other bits of the TX, like the power amps, will be fair old
pumping heat out, and are usually built into the same case as the oscillator. The frequency will drift
most when the TX is first switched on as all the components will be at the same temperature as the
air outside the TX's case, this is known as the AMBIENT TEMPERATURE. After the TX is turned on
the heat from the amps will warm the air in the case directly or indirectly. As the FET warms the
frequency will drift a bit. When heat loss equals heat gain you get THERMAL EQUILIBRIUM and it
won't drift more. Keep your TX out of drafts to avoid messing this up. If you have a frequency counter
plug it in to a dummy load and see how long it takes for the frequency displayed to settle down, maybe
about 15 minutes. If you have time you can arrive at the TX site early and run your TX for the warm up
time with no input to a dummy load. This avoids listeners who tune in immediately having to retune as
your frequency drifts.

CRYSTAL OSCILLATORS

This is also simple oscillator but incorporates a crystal into the frequency determining network. There
are various types of crystals (fundamental, 3rd overtone, 5th overtone etc.) and various ways of using
them (series mode, parallel mode) but their basic properties are the same. They're resonant on one
frequency which is determined by the crystal's characteristics when made. This is their problem,
whereas a VFO's are not very stable crystal oscillators are too bloody stable and it's a job to get
enough deviation. You'll probably lose the higher frequencies of your program and stereo is right out.
Also chances are you'll have to get a crystal made order for your desired frequency so if you want to
change it you'll need a new one.

PHASE LOCKED LOOP (PLL) OSCILLATORS

The way its done properly is with the phase locked loop oscillator. This combines the ease of
tuning and wide deviation of a VFO with the frequency stability of a crystal oscillator. It works thus:
A crystal oscillator is used to provide a reference frequency. This is digitally divided by logic chips
to a relatively low frequency, say 25 kHz. A VFO provides the output, which is also digitally divided
to give another relatively low frequency. These two low frequencies are presented to a PHASE
COMPARATOR which basically decides which frequency is higher by comparing the phases of the
two signals. The phase comparator generates an ERROR VOLTAGE which is connected back to the
input of the VFO through a low pass filter. This is the loop bit.

If the VFO is running too fast the phase comparator decreases the error voltage so as to slow it down
till the phases at its input are the same. If its running too slow the error voltage is increased to
speed it till the phases are the same. All this happens instantaneously of course so the output
frequency remains constant.

In this way the temperature stability of the VFO isn't important and it can be built round a BJT, as its
output frequency is phase locked to the crystal oscillator, and the frequency is very good.

Two more things to explain. How do you change the output frequency? By making the VFO's
divider programmable. Say its set to divide by the number N. The phase comparator is a simple minded
sort of soul, concerned only with equalizing the phases at its inputs, it doesn't know what's really
coming out of the VFO, which is N times the divided reference signal. Because this signal is so low
compared to the VFO frequency N can be made to have hundreds of different values, giving
hundreds of different output frequencies from the VFO. So changing the frequencies is just a matter
of clicking some little switches.

Hang on a second, the VFO is being frequency modulated by the audio input, so its frequency at any
given instant depends on the voltage of the audio output. We don't want this variation of the VFO's
frequency to be ironed out by the PLL system, so we 'iron out' the error voltage from the phase
comparator, so it just contains the underlying trend rather than what's happening any split second.
This is purpose of the low pass filter.

The system can be simplified by leaving out the dividers. If this is done you end up with an output
frequency determined solely by the crystal. You've still got the wide deviation capability of course,
which distinguishes this system from one based on a simple crystal oscillator. This sort of fixed
frequency oscillator is used for things like wireless mikes and could be used for studio to TX links.
Programmable PLL oscillators are used in all manner of professional communication equipment,
including broadcast TX's.

BUFFERS

Any oscillator, regardless of its type, is followed by a buffer. This is usually one or two transistors
operating in what is known as class A mode. Its function is to protect the oscillator from what is
going on further along the circuit, especially from changes in its 'load' as the following stage is
tuned. The combination of oscillator and buffer together is called the EXCITER and is a small but
fully fledged TX. Small in respect to its output power. Typical values are in the region of 100 - 500
mW.

AMPLIFIERS

To increase the power output of our fledgling TX we need to add an amplifier. Obviously we are
talking about radio frequency (RF), not audio amps. RF amps have certain important
characteristics:

a) Bandwidth

b) Gain and maximum power output

c) Input and output impedance

BANDWIDTH. This is the range frequencies the amp will amplify properly. The bandwidth is
ultimately limited by the characteristics of the active devices in the amp (i.e. transistors or valves),
but more specifically by its type, LINEAR or a TUNED amplifier.

A linear amp will amplify quite a large range of frequencies and they have a good bandwidth,
commonly 1.8 - 30 MHz which covers all of the amateur shortwave broadcast bands... no good for a
VHF pirate, but could be useful for a AM pirate. They operate in class A or B mode and have the
advantage that they don't need adjusting when the frequency is changed. Their disadvantage are they're
more complex and dearer than tuned amps and are much harder to design, requiring extensive
knowledge of the transistors round which the amp is constructed. Linear amps for VHF are
uncommon.

Tuned amps only amplify a narrow band of frequencies, they have a small bandwidth, centered on one
frequency which is determined by the TUNED CIRCUITS in the input and output networks of the
amp. Tuned circuits have a RESONANT frequency. This can be adjusted by variable capacitors known
as trimmers, to the desired frequency.

The amp will produce max. output when the tuned circuit resonant frequency is the same as the input
frequency from the exciter. Tuned amps often operate in the class C mode, which is more efficient
than A or B. This means more of the power being drawn from the battery or whatever turns into watts
up the aerial rather than heat the amp. They are relatively simple circuits, and are easier to design.
The bandwidth is a trade-off with gain, the wider the bandwidth, the less the gain. The disadvantages
of a tuned amp is of course you have to tune it to the frequency you're using and if you change the
frequency you'll have to retune to maintain the gain of the amp.

GAIN AND MAXIMUM OUTPUT POWER

The POWER GAIN (as opposed to a voltage or current gain which is different) of an amp is defined
as a ratio: Power gain= Output power / Input power, and is a measure of the amps ability to make its
input bigger. Power gains are often expressed in DECIBELS (dB) which are defined:

Power gain (dB) = 10 log(Output power / Input power).

Amps also have a max. output power. When this is reached increasing the input power won't
result in more output power and may damage the amp.

In the case of single stage (i.e. one transistor) class C tuned amps the gain and max. output power of
the amp is basically the gain and max. output power of the transistor. Knowing these we can calculate
the power necessary to produce the max. output power. e.g. lets consider the popular MRF237
transistor. According to the makers' data sheet this has a max. output power of 4 watt and a gain of 12
dB. First we've to convert the gain in dB to ordinary gain: Gain=10^(gain (dB) / 10) for example:
Gain=10^(12/10) = 10^1.2 = 15.8 Input Power = Output power / Gain = 4 / 15.85 = 0.25.

So for 4 watt output power we need 250 mW input power. Most exciters can manage this, hence
the popularity of the MRF237 in the first amp after the exciter. The joker in the pack is that all these
figures are for a frequency of 175 MHz, that on which the transistor was designed. You can't predict
what happens at 100 MHz and have to experiment.

The MRF238 has 30 watt output power and a gain of 9 dB, so it needs 3.8 watt input power. This
can be had from the MRF237. That's how the makers (Motorola Corpse.) planned it.

INPUT AND OUTPUT IMPEDANCE

Impedance is the alternating current (AC) version of resistance.

The standard impedance of exciters and inputs and outputs of amps is 50 . The impedance of the input
and the output networks of an amp is altered by the tuned circuits which you recall also tune the
circuit in a tuned amp. The INPUT IMPEDANCE is important as it effects the LOAD the amp has on the
stage before it. Max. power is transferred between stages when the impedance of the output and input
are equal. If the impedances aren't equal a MISMATCH is said to occur and in this case some energy is
reflected back from the input of a stage into the output of the preceding one, where its wasted as
heat.

THE VSWR METER

Some of you may know that we can use a VSWR meter (also known as Voltage Standing Wave Ratio
meter, SWR meter or a Reflectometer) to detect mismatch between TX and the aerial, but a VSWR
meter is just as much at home doing this between amp stages. VSWR is the ratio of the forward (or
incident) and reflected power. Except for dear ones they work the same. The switch is set to forward or
the SET button is pressed. The knob is then adjusted to make the meter read full scale. The switch is
then set to reverse or the button is pre-released. It now indicates the VSWR. A VSWR of 1:1 is
perfect (no reflected power) and so unlikely. One of 00:1 shows all the power is reflected back into the
amp, you'll get this with a VSWR connected to the amp output with nothing on the VSWR output (unless
its got a built in dummy load). You'll also get it if there's a short circuit in the VSWR meter. In either
case switch off IMMEDIATELY or you'll blow your power transistor.

The point of all this is to get the max. power output from the amp into the aerial, instead of a hot TX
and a bad signal.

To tune such an amp you need a load connected to the output (or it'll blow up). We could use an
aerial but this introduces an extra unknown quantity... the characteristics of the aerial. As well as
the fact that we'd be broadcasting. What we need is a DUMMY LOAD.

THE DUMMY LOAD

This is basically a resistor, made so it presents a load to the amp's output independent of frequency
(unlike the aerial). The 3 things about a dummy load we're interested are:

a) It should be suitable for the frequency we're interested in, about 100 MHz.

b) It should be rated to take the power we're trying to make.

c) It should have a resistance of 50 to match the output network of the amp.

When buying ask for one for the 2 meter band, amateur radio, centered on 145 MHz. Most test
gear for this band will work on frequencies we're interested in.

The amp should first be tuned with reduced input power and supply voltage. Adjust the network for
the best input match (lowest reading on a VSWR meter connected to the input side) and adjust the
output trimmers for max. output power. Be sure the extra power is in the frequency you want and not in
the HARMONICS. Check with a wave meter (more of this coming up). Another VSWR meter can be
used for a relative indication of the output power, or the RF PROBE will give an absolute indication.
The pairs of trimmers are very interdependent, adjust one and you'll have to adjust the other, and so
on.

This done, if all OK, increase the input power by increasing the voltage supply to the previous stage,
and the voltage supply and repeat the tuning. Do all this a few times till you reach the required
levels. Listen on a nearby (but not too near) receiver. The signal should be in just one place on the dial
with no funny noises or modulations going on. Check with a wavemeter. Altering the trimmers and
varying the input power and supply voltage should result in smooth variations of the supply current and
output power with no steps or jumps. The exception is, as the input power is reduced at some point the
amp will switch off, a characteristics of class C amps.

To vary the supply voltage you need a Variable Stabilized Power Supply Unit. If you can't get hold
of one you could build one. They're not expensive and are well handy, and give you some
experience, if needed, of electronic construction.

HARMONICS

Harmonics are multiples of the transmitting frequency. For a frequency of 100 MHz, the first
harmonic, known as the FUNDAMENTAL, is 100 MHz, the second is 200 MHz, the third is 300
MHz etc. They're produced as side effects in various parts of the circuit and will interfere with other
users of these frequencies if let escape from the TX. Known as RADIO FREQUENCY
INTERFERENCE (RFI). Tuned class C amps don't amplify harmonics, as they're out of the range of the
amps abilities. But the use of class C means that harmonics are generated by the amp along with the
desired frequency. The strongest ones (apart from the fundamental) from such amps are usually the
third, then the fifth etc. The amplitude of harmonics is minimized if the output networks are
tuned

properly, but they're still there. Oscillators and buffers can also make harmonics if not set up right.

WAVEMETERS

To detect harmonics we need an ABSORPTION WAVEMETER, usually called just a wavemeter.
Or we can use a GRID DIP OSCILLATOR (GDO) or a gate dip oscillator, both of which are known as
DIP METERS.

Most dip meters have a switch which turns them into wavemeters. A wavemeter has a tuning knob,
calibrated in frequency, a meter showing signal strength, and some kind of aerial. You hold the
aerial near a coil in the bit of the circuit you're interested in, and tune the wavemeter. It shows how much
signal is present on the frequencies shown in the scale. So you can see what frequencies are being
generated in that part of the circuit. Ideally you'll just find the fundamental, unless the circuit is a
frequency tripler or something.

If you buy a wavemeter be sure it covers the right range, from below 100 MHz to get the
fundamental to above 300 MHz to get the third harmonic.

Even with all tuned right you're still going to have some harmonics generated by the last stage. A
sensible pirate won't let these reach the aerial, e.g. if you're using a frequency of 100.35 MHz the third
harmonic us 307.05 MHz which happens to be that used by USAF Upper Heyford's Control Tower. You
might think this is funny but you won't stay on the air for long. To stop harmonics reaching the aerial
we need a BANDPASS FILTER.

Each amp bumps up the power some more, because the transistor in each one can only supply so much
gain. So if you're the proud owner of a 5 watt transmitter and you're offered a 1000 watt amp its useless
as you'd need probably 100 watt input to drive it so you'd need amps in between.

To tune a series of amps on your TX you must break in, physically if needed, to tune each one at
time. Do this by unsoldering components and soldering in short bits of coax with plugs to connect
to dummy load and VSWR meter.

BANDPASS FILTER

This filter only allows through a narrow band of frequencies, i.e. it has a narrow bandwidth, a good one
would be less than 1 MHz. It needs standard 50 input and output impedance and be able to take power
you're using and be tuned to the frequency you want to let through. Other frequencies are reduced
drastically, by an amount known as INSERTION LOSS. It reduces also the desired frequency slightly.
To keep this loss low bandpass filters for high output powers are usually pretty chunky numbers.

Pirate gear doesn't have this filter built into the final stages so if you need one you have to add it on. It
needs a well screened case to stop harmonics leaking out. In fact your whole TX should be well
screened for the same reason. Say e.g. you used a shoebox and had your oscillator on a third of a
frequency of 92.25 MHz you could be interfering with pagers of a local hospital as they use 31.75
MHz. Proper screening and a bandpass filter will eliminate such possibilities.

CONNECTORS

As you may have guessed you can't use any connectors on VHF as they have to match the amp and
feeder. Use BNC or the UHF series.

UHF is best for higher powers as you can get a wider cable into the plug. N type is also good but more
expensive.

FEEDERS

So you've got your nice clean harmonic free signal coming out of your bandpass filter... we're on the
home run. All that's left is to get the signal up the aerial feeder to the aerial and we're away. BUT the
aerial cable needs to MATCH the TX's output stage at one end and the aerial at the other. The cable
like the TX's output, the connectors and the aerial has an impedance and to match this should be 50
. It also needs a LOW LOSS or your watts will escape as heat. Not the same as a bad VSWR where
you lose energy in the TX, a good VSWR does not mean the cable's okay.

Decent cables for short runs are UR76 and RG56U. For longer runs or higher powers use UR67.

AERIALS

At last, the aerial! You can run a pirate knowing a little of TX's, but if you know nothing of
aerials you'll have a few listeners. So you must read a book on it. I recommend 'The Two Meter
Antenna Handbook' by F.C. Judd G2BCX. Lot's of it isn't useful but he goes into things like propagation,
matching, VSWR in better detail. All the dimensions he gives are for the two meter amateur band,
centered in 145 MHz. To convert to other frequencies all dimensions (including diameter of aerial
element etc.) should be divided by your frequency in MHz and then multiplied by 145.

POLARIZATION

One thing to decide is what polarization to use. The main ones are HORIZONTAL and VERTICAL.
To simplify you can say a horizontally placed aerial produces horizontally polarized radio waves and a
vertically placed one vertically polarized ones. To receive a horizontally polarized signal you need a
horizontally polarized aerial, and for vertical one you need a vertically polarized aerial. Most
receivers on FM have horizontally polarized aerials, but all car aerials are vertically polarized. So what
polarization you go for depends on the audience you expect. E.g. on Sunday afternoon you'd expect
people at home so use horizontal, while in rush hour you might favor vertical. You can build an aerial
which splits the power between both, as used in legal stations, known as MIXED polarization. But the
effect of radio waves bouncing off buildings etc. tends to twist the polarization of your signal from
horizontal to vertical and vice versa, so your signal could still be picked up by the wrong aerial.

Your transmitting site will affect you choice of aerial. In the middle of the area you want to cover
you'll need an OMNIDIRECTIONAL aerial which transmits equally each ways, while outside your
coverage area you can beam the signal in with a DIRECTIONAL aerial.

The simplest possible aerial for VHF is known as the HALF WAVE DIPOLE. The elements can be
bits of thin aluminum or copper tube.

The impedance is about 75 which is close enough to 50 to be fed from 50 cable without too much
power loss. A half wave dipole used vertically is omnidirectional, but when used horizontally it has a
fig of eight coverage which isn't very useful. Also a dipole needs a balanced feed. You need a BALUN
(BALance to UNbalance) transformer. These can be easily made out of bits of coax cable.

If you don't do this power will be radiated from the feeder. An aerial with an impedance greatly
different from 50 needs an IMPEDANCE TRANSFORMER also made out of bits of coax cable.

Before going on air get a low VSWR by adjusting the position of the aerial and any adjustable pieces.
Aim for 2:1 or less. Use low power into the aerial when tuning it up and adjusting, if using a 100's of
watts and a bit came off in your hand the VSWR could be so bad as to blow the final transistor. For the
same reason check the continuity of the aerial with an ohmmeter before plugging in, to be sure its what
its meant to be, either a short circuit or an open one, depending on the type. A dipole should be an
open circuit.

SITING

Siting is very important. Height is the main factor, even more than watts! Since VHF radio waves go
almost in straight lines, 100 watt in your front room will only reach your neighbors, while 5 watt up
high and unblocked will go 10 km's or more. The waves do bend a bit so you'll cover more than you can
see but its hard to say how much.

III. Operation of
a Pirate Radio Station: A look at Pirating in
the United States.

PREFACE

It is the opinion of the author that many pirate radio stations are founded upon the principle of novelty.
That is, their founders either find it amusing to inch over the lines of the law, or they get a certain kick
out of doing something to make themselves different from their peers. Such stations seem unworthy of
the label, "pirate radio station."

In a world of increasing regulation and control, deviance from established modes of behavior is
tolerated less and less. New ways are constantly being discovered by the government to discourage
deviant behavior. The broadcast community is already regulated by the government and extremely
limited in its ability to present alternative expressions. Pirate radio stations enjoy an unfettered ability to
present alternative ideas and music and thus are a source of free expressions not carrying the government
stamp of approval.

The operation of a pirate radio station is likely to create some controversy if its audience is substantial
enough. This controversy is likely to attract the attention of the authorities who are less than happy
when during the course of exercising their First Amendment rights, people present ideas not approved of
by the establishment. Thus, it behooves those who would operate a pirate radio station to prepare for the
inevitable attempts by the law enforcement community to apprehend the responsible individuals and to
shut the operation down. This exposition is written with the goal of making law enforcement's objectives
just a little bit more challenging to realize.

Careful choices regarding the station location, duration of broadcasts, time of broadcasts, and frequency
of broadcasts need to be made in order to minimize the chances of being caught by the authorities.

Under no circumstances should you ever attempt to operate a pirate radio station from a building you
regularly frequent (e.g. home or office). This is asking to be caught. You should choose between
operation from a vehicle or man-portable operation. If you choose to broadcast from within a vehicle,
several factors should be considered when choosing a broadcast location. In addition to the obvious goal
of maximizing your elevation for good signal propagation, you should select a location that is well
hidden or not likely to arouse anyone's suspicion and you should consider any difficulties that may come
up should you need to leave suddenly and quickly.

The location you broadcasts from should not arouse the suspicion of any passing vehicles. An ideal
location would be one that is well hidden from all roadways and far enough away from any buildings so
as not to attract the attention of their residents. In addition, there should be more than one path away
from your broadcast location should need for a hasty retreat become necessary.

In order to locate "undesirable" radio transmissions, the authorities will utilize direction finding (DF
for short) radio equipment. Direction finding equipment utilizes a highly directional antenna coupled to
a tuner and a field strength meter. After the desired frequency has been selected with the tuner, the
operator rotates the DF antenna until he obtains a peak reading on the field strength meter and then notes
the heading the antenna is pointed in. Next, a vector is drawn on a map beginning at the operators
current location and extending in the direction of the DF antenna's heading. Assuming the
"undesirable" radio transmission hasn't moved, successive readings from different locations should result
in vectors that intersect at the origin of the transmission. In practice, because of limitations on the
accuracy of the equipment, it is not possible to precisely determine the location of the transmitter from
the first set of readings. Usually, additional sets of readings will be necessary before the location of the
transmitter can be narrowed down sufficiently to allow a ground search for it.

In order to thwart DF equipment, you must be willing to either limit the length of your transmissions
such that the authorities have insufficient time to locate your radio transmissions, or you must operate
from a moving vehicle. Although possible, neither of these options is particularly attractive, and
alternatives do exist.

If you are fortunate enough to live in a location with significant areas of forest nearby, these can often
be ideal locations from which to stage your broadcasts. At nighttime, the authorities are very unlikely to
venture into the woods in order to locate a pirate radio station. They are far too vulnerable in such
situations and generally will not pursue a suspect unless the odds are overwhelmingly in their favor.
Rather, they will cover any obvious means into or out of the woods (such as a trail) or any roadways in
the general vicinity of the broadcasting and search any suspicious individuals or vehicles they discover
during the period of time immediately following the broadcast. By taking a few simple precautions,
broadcasting from within a forested area of reasonable size can be the best alternative to mobile
operation or 30-minute broadcasts.

It is advisable to first visit the location you intend to broadcast from during the day. Pick a location not
too close to any roads or paths and make sure you will be able to find it in the dark. Relatively high
points with a line-of-sight to your listeners is another important thing to look for. Think about where
you are going to put your antenna. Is there a tree nearby that will provide an ideal placement? Can you
climb it at night

without risk of falling? How much coax will you need to reach the antenna from your broadcast location?
Think about several different paths of escape should the need arise. Explore these for a short distance to
ascertain their viability.

After finding a good location to make your broadcasts from, there will be a strong temptation to use
that location again and again for future broadcasts. Unless you want to be caught, resist this temptation.
The authorities may have located a site you have used previously, and could be waiting for you nearby the
next time you try to broadcast. Also, when you have finished your broadcast and are packing up, keep in
mind that anything you leave behind will help the authorities in their quest to find you and bring you to
"justice." Assume the authorities will scour the area shortly after you depart so make sure you leave
nothing behind for them. If there are smooth surfaces around, don't forget about fingerprints. Either wear
gloves during your broadcast, or spray everything you might have touched with a degreaser before
leaving.

II. AVOIDING THE AUTHORITIES

(Detection and Evasion)

There are two phases to avoiding capture by the authorities. In the first phase, the goal is to detect
them well before they have detected you. In the second phase, the goal is to escape without being
detected or caught. Success in the first phase will greatly influence the outcome of the second phase.

The authorities rely heavily upon radio for communication. As a result, it pays to purchase a decent
scanner and become familiar with its use and the operating procedures of the authorities. Frequency lists
are available which list the frequencies used by law enforcement in your area. In addition, books are
available which list federal frequency assignments. You should spend time going through such books and
making a list of frequencies you think may be used in the event a search for your station were to be
conducted. Don't forget to include mutual-aid frequencies in your list as they are often used when
different enforcement agencies want to coordinate with one another. You should spend some time in the
general area you will be broadcasting from listening to the scanner to determine which frequencies on
your list are appropriate for scanning and prune the remainder from your list. While it is generally better
to leave a questionable frequency on your list, irrelevant channels may reduce the probability you will
hear something important on another channel.

Whenever possible, you should take along someone you trust to your broadcast site and have them stand
patrol. They should wear dark (black or camouflage) clothing and find a location to stand where they
have a good view of any obvious routes of approach to your broadcast area. A pair of walkie-talkies is
ideal for keeping in touch if you will be separated by more than a few tens of feet. Keep in mind that
your transmissions could be monitored so watch what you say. Don't use names or other information
which could give away your identity or location. If you are using flashlights, purchase some red tail-light
tape at an auto parts store and cover the lens with it to reduce your chances of being seen and to maintain
your night vision.

If there are just a couple of obvious routes leading to your broadcast location, you might consider
setting up perimeter alarms along those routes. Various party noise-makers are commonly available at
toy stores which make a bang when a string to which they are attached is pulled.

Using some thin wire, tie one of these noise-makers between a pair of trees through which the route you
want to alarm passes through. Make sure the wire is obscured as much as possible to minimize its
chance of detection by any intruders. Make sure you set such alarms far enough away to give you enough
time to make your escape but close enough that you will be able to easily hear them.

The key to successfully escaping from the authorities can be summarized as follows: DON'T PANIC.
Proper planning is essential. You should have planned several routes of escape beforehand and
considered what to do with your equipment. If time allows, you will want to pack it up and take it with
you. If you need to escape quickly, hiding it may be your best option. This might be as simple as
covering it with something to camouflage it. Perhaps you even found a good place to set it up that
already takes advantage of natural cover and it is pretty well hidden to begin with. Assuming you are
operating at night, it also helps enormously to wear dark clothing and remove any shiny objects such as
jewelry or watches (leave them at home).

You will likely become aware of the authorities plans for you through one of two means. You will hear
about a search on your scanner or you will detect their physical presence. In the former case, you
probably have plenty of time to pack up your equipment and make a careful escape. You may want to
leave incriminating evidence such as your equipment hidden somewhere and come back later for it when
the heat is off. Plastic garbage bags are ideal for protecting equipment left in the woods for a few days.
In the latter case, remaining calm and using your head could will make the difference between being
caught with your pants down and just having a close call.

The instinctive reaction to the presence (impending or actual) of the authorities is to flee. The
authorities know this and if they are even marginally competent will have taken steps to maximize their
chances of capturing individuals mindlessly running away. Unless they have obviously seen you and are
actively pursuing you, you should stop and force yourself to look around and consider what options are
open to you. Approximately how many people are after you? Are they far enough away that you can
move away from them without them seeing or hearing you? Perhaps it would be best to try to remain
hidden until they are far enough away that you can more safely risk slipping away?

Unless you are certain that your vehicle has not been detected by the authorities (because it was
extremely well hidden, or parked with a number of other vehicles, for instance), then do not approach it
after your presence has been detected. It is very likely that the authorities will have discovered it and left
someone behind to watch it. By itself, the vehicle is little more than weak circumstantial evidence to
connect you with any wrongdoing, but if you are caught returning to it (especially with equipment), you
will probably live to regret it. You should have previously considered other means of getting home if
there was trouble and follow those plans.

III. DEALING WITH THE AUTHORITIES

(What to do when you get caught with your pants down)

There are at least two different ways of getting caught. The FCC could catch you and send you a notice
of violation or the police could catch you while broadcasting or while attempting to flee them after
broadcasting. Two entirely different methods are called for when dealing with each of these.

If you receive a FCC notice of violation, you are probably best off ignoring it. If they start getting
serious about trying to collect fines from you, I'd suggest picking up a copy of "How to File for
Bankruptcy" by Nolo Press. It details a number of different strategies for keeping bill-collectors out of
your pockets, and if necessary, tells you how to file for protection from creditors (it helps if you don't
have a lot of obvious assets -- a house or expensive car, for instance). You may also wish to discuss your
options with an experienced attorney.

If you are apprehended by the police during a broadcast or after an unsuccessful attempt at fleeing from
them, remain calm. They will ask you questions related to the incident for which you have been
apprehended. It is ok to answer questions about your identity, but do not answer any questions related to
any illegal activities you have been involved with.

If you can get away with telling them you don't know the answer to their question(s), do this, otherwise
answer politely but firmly that you cannot help them. If it isn't obvious (e.g. you have not been read your
Miranda rights), ask them if you are under arrest. If not, you are free to go. If so, tell them you would
like to speak with your attorney before answering any further questions and then KEEP YOUR MOUTH
SHUT. They may try to trick you into incriminating yourself or providing them with information that
will assist them in building a case against you. Do not help them! Make sure any and all people that are
with you are thoroughly familiar with these procedures as one person slipping up could have devastating
results for everyone involved.

It's probably a good idea to carry the name and phone number of an attorney specializing in criminal
law with you whenever you are involved in such activities. Attorneys are very useful when it comes to
reducing the police's likelihood of violating your civil rights and they can arrange to have you bailed out
promptly as well.

Suggested Equipment

Power:

Motorcycle batteries make ideal power sources. They are available in a number of different sizes. A
12-14AH battery will power a typical 25- 35 watt station for at least two hours before needing to be
recharged. These batteries are light enough to be carried in a backpack along with other equipment for
several miles by a single person if necessary.

You will also need to purchase some wire to connect the motorcycle battery with the transmitting
equipment. For the power amplifier, especially, make sure you don't use thin wire. It could draw 5
amperes or more which will not only cause thin wires to get hot, but will also result in a substantial
voltage drop across the wires as a resulting loss of power output. In general, 18-gauge wire should be
sufficient for amps up to 25-35 watts.

It is advisable to buy a cheap analog voltmeter that can be clipped onto the battery during a broadcast to
monitor its condition. Any sudden drop in voltage across the battery indicates it is discharged, and
measures should then be taken to switch to another power source or end the broadcast. Digital
voltmeters are harder to read from a distance or at night and are more expensive.

Transmitting Equipment:

Obviously, you'll need an FM transmitter. A number of kits are available. Any kit that runs off of 12
VDC will do. If you want your signal to propagate more than a few miles, you should get a power
amplifier, too. Power outputs around 25-35 watts are ideal for portable operation with a motorcycle
battery as the power source.

Antennas:

Most FM antennas have 300 ohms of impedance. Most FM transmitters and amplifiers expect a load of
50 to 75 ohms. It is important to match the load the transmitter/amplifier sees to the antenna in order to
get as much signal out as possible and in order to prevent damage to the transmitter/amplifier. For low-
power setups (under 5 watts or so), one way to do this is with a common 75/300 ohm transformer. These
are sold at Radio Shack. They mate to a female F-connector, so it would be advisable to get whatever
adapter you need to mate your coax to the transformer (most coax has BNC or UHF connectors on it).
Running more power through this small transformer will probably saturate it and cause the output signal
to be distorted.

For higher power setups, you can make a 1/2-wave dipole with two 1/4-wave lengths of wire and some
coax. The J-Pole antenna is also relatively easy to make and very portable. See, for example, the ARRL
Handbook (available at most libraries and many bookstores) for instructions on making these and other
antennas. It should also be possible to build a 50 or 75/300 ohm transformer to enable you to use
commercial FM antennas with your transmitter. Once again, the ARRL Handbook is an ideal source of
information for how to do this.

An SWR meter is an invaluable aid to checking the performance of your FM antenna. They should
always be used anytime you are transmitting with more than a watt or so of power in order to detect a
bad match between the transmitter and the antenna before the transmitter becomes damaged. Once
again, Radio Shack sells relatively inexpensive SWR meters that are adequate. Better ones can be
obtained at your local amateur radio store.

Make sure you purchase enough coax cable to allow you to place your antenna a reasonable distance
from your transmitting equipment. 50 feet is a good compromise between signal loss and flexibility in
antenna placement. RG/58 is adequate for such short runs of cable, but you should consider using RG/8X
or RG/8 if you need longer runs of cable.

Audio:

Many radio stations will want the ability to broadcast pre-recorded material from a tape or CD as well
as live material from a microphone. A mixer is an essential piece of equipment for such operation.
Small, battery powered mixer decks are inexpensive and available from Radio Shack. By connecting
them between your microphone, CD player, tape player, and transmitting equipment you will be able to
switch between any of several sources or mix them together.

If you want to use a portable CD player, bear in mind the expected battery life of a fully charged cell,
and make sure you bring an extra if you plan a long broadcast. Likewise for a walkman. Also, you will
need an assortment of patch cables to connect your CD player, walkman, microphone, and mixer
together. Once again, Radio Shack is a good source for pre-made cables of this type.

Miscellaneous:

It is advisable to bring along an FM radio. This will allow you to monitor your transmissions to make
sure you are getting good modulation and you are tuned to the frequency you want to be.

A piece of foam or other material upon which to place electronic equipment to keep it away from dirt
and rocks is advisable. It is also good for sitting on. Strong, thin cord is handy for tying up your antenna
in a nearby tree or other tall structure.

Head-lamps (head-mounted flashlights) are invaluable for nighttime broadcasting. Purchase some red
tail-light-repair tape at your local auto supply store and cover the lens with it to turn the beam red and
thus preserve your night vision.

Don't forget to bring along a bottle of water and some snacks to eat during your broadcast.

Security:

Buy yourself a decent scanner. Next, get a copy of local, state, and federal frequency assignments for
your area. Program the scanner with the local police, sheriff's department, mutual aid frequencies, and
anything else you think might be relevant. Spend some time monitoring the authorities to become
familiar with the operating practices of them.

A partner can be an invaluable aid during a pirate radio broadcast. Make sure he is someone you can
trust! While one person operates the radio equipment, the other person can monitor the scanner and
watch the perimeter for intruders. Walkie Talkies are an ideal way for the DJ to stay in touch with his
security.

Further Reading

o Barnett, Richard; Monitor America, SMB publishing, 1992,

ISBN #0-939430-19-3

Contains lists of frequencies used by the local, state, and federal government for the entire United
States.

Available at Radio Shack. Various volumes cover local, state, and some federal government frequencies
for various regions in the United States.

o ARRL; ARRL Handbook, ARRL, 1992

Available at many bookstores and Amateur Radio stores. Contains a wealth of information about
amateur radio station operation much of which is applicable to pirate radio as well. Contains
information on constructing transmitters, amplifiers and antennas, among other things.

If you want to become familiar with police investigative techniques, this is an excellent place to start.
Contains a wealth of information which when applied appropriately will better enable you to avoid
undesirable run-ins with the authorities when involved in questionable activities.

IV. How to be a
Radio Pirate U.K.

This section tells you exactly how to go ahead setting up your own pirate radio with all the tips
learned from bitter experience. First of all here's a list of main things you'll need. So you want to be a
radio pirate? Read on...

What you'll need:

A. A group of committed people who get on with each other and have plenty of time and energy.

B. A program, presuming you have something worth saying or playing. You don't even need a
studio to start off with. Just borrow someone's stereo and a microphone and start making practice
recordings onto good quality cassette tapes.

C. A Transmitter. Ideally over 10 watt power, but 5 watts is fine for local broadcasts, or when using an
aerial with gain. You can't buy one over the counter in Britain, but here are some alternatives:

I) Buy one from another pirate (beware of rip-offs).

II) Buy one over the counter abroad. In Italy for instance you can get a high quality 50 watt transmitter
over the counter for £200. You can buy kits in Belgium, France, Netherlands, USA, etc. You then
have to smuggle it home.

III) Build your own. A hobbyist can build a low power FM transmitter easily. Try to interest radio
hams or dissident engineers. It's almost essential to have at least one person in your group with some
technical know how.

IV) Get one built to your specification. There are a few electronics engineers about who will build them
for a reasonable price.

D. Antenna. You can adapt a design yourself from an antenna handbook (e.g. The 2 Meter Antenna
Book). Or use one of our ready made designs. Look out for aluminum tubing or struts which make
good building material.

E. Odds and ends. You'll need basic tools (soldering iron, multimeter, SWR meter), a cheap cassette
deck, probably one or two good car batteries, a roll of coax cable for the aerial, a radio to listen in on,
etc. Also start reading Amateur Radio Handbooks and all relevant writings.

VHF: Pros and Cons

First lets deal with FM (Frequency Modulated) broadcasting, which is probably your choice. The
advantages of FM are many. The transmitters are small and quite cheap. Reception tends to be
either very clear or non-existent. Its excellent for music and for recording off and can quite easily be
adapted to transmit stereo (impossible with AM). A major plus for the pirate is that its easy to hide and
transport the gear, aerials are comparatively small and can be made collapsible. It's also possible to
put in a vehicle, even an bicycle and go mobile, albeit with a smaller and changing reception area.
The average 5 to 20 watt transmitter would be in a metal box no bigger than 12" by 6" by 3" in size,
and weigh no more than 8 lbs with the rest of the gear (but not including the battery, if you're using
one), The aerial is not only shorter but more efficient and of course more practical than the long and
tricky procedure for AM aerials. Also low power FM transmitters ('rigs') can be tuned to slightly
different frequencies, on AM you're stuck on one, unless you get a new crystal.

The disadvantage is that VHF-FM is essentially a 'line of sight' communication, which means your
reception area depends crucially on the height of your aerial above large blocking objects. This is no
problem if you can get up on a hill, or a tower block but it does restrict the choice of broadcasting sites,
making you easier to find and trap. With local broadcasting you have more choice of sites. In very hilly
area, unless you can get up on a mountain, you'd better choose AM, also if you want to broadcast
scattered communities over a wide area. Distance covered with an FM rig depends as how much
height as on power. A 40 watt rig on a 15 story tower block should cover a 15 miles radius if there are
no blocking objects. A 4 watt rig should go 5 miles from the same height but if you build a directional
aerial with 'gain' you can multiply that power many times. You don't really need a big expensive and
hard to build transmitter. Also don't assume a 100 watt rig is ten times as powerful as a 10 watt one, it
doesn't work like that.

To sum up, FM broadcasting is the ideal for the guerrilla or community pirate, cheap, mobile and
adaptable. another advantage is that there's loads of room on the FM broadcasting band, it's literally
half empty. On AM its pretty crowded, and at night you're likely to be blotted out by continental
interference.

The Broadcasting Site (FM)

TOWER BLOCKS (SKY SCRAPERS)

In cities tower blocks have been an ideal answer for good coverage and wide reception and are
especially favored by commercial pirates (who often use a link transmitter from the studio to the tower
block so as to go live). A further advantage is that there are usually electric sockets in the lift or heating
rooms on the roof, so you can just plug in provided your gear is so adjusted, rather than lug car or
lorry batteries about. This is 'Stealing Electricity', of course. If you're caught broadcasting the
electricity company could bring this additional charge, though in practice we've never heard of it
happening. The advantage to sticking in car batteries is that you can conceal your rig anywhere
on the roof, rather than having it right by the plug socket, though in a surprise raid your aerial cable
will lead them straight to it anyway.

To get onto the roof of a tower block you need a crowbar, or better, a key. The 'Fireman's keys'
have to be standard for all blocks, so once you have one you can get onto most roofs easily.

Try asking other pirates, or possibly a friendly caretaker or fireman. Or you can break the door, steal
the mortise lock, get keys made up for it, then replace it, such keys may not fit all roofs.

When on the roof BE CAREFUL (sudden gusts of wind can blow you over the at this height!) and
always wear soft shoes and keep quiet. Lots of people have been busted simply because the tenants
below heard them and called the police. Its useful to dress like a repair person, and claim if seen or
challenged, to be a lift mechanic. The main problem with tower blocks is that, if raided, you can
easily be trapped (see how to get away with it).

MEDIUM SIZED BUILDINGS

If you're a local station, or have a high power rig or an aerial with gain (or if you're just testing) you
don't need to be on a tower block. Any building higher than most others will do, and you can increase
your height for instance by mounting your aerial on top of high, well secured scaffold pole (note: there
must be a wooden or plastic section between the pole and the actual aerial).

The advantage of lower buildings is that you can multiply both the available sites for broadcasting. You
will have to switch sites as often as possible. Also you will have more escape routes and 'bolt holes' than
on a tower block. Unfortunately this may also mean you have to watch more potential approach routes
by the police and DTI, and you'll need more lookouts if you're planning to save the gear when
attacked.

BROADCASTING FROM HILLS

If your town or city has hills this is a good option, the higher the better. You can use a piece of derelict
or common land, or at night you can use parks, cemeteries or even allotments. A better option is if
there are hills outside the built up area, then use a field or wood away from houses. If you use the
directional aerial you can cover the city just as well. This was done by Andromeda Radio, to good
effect, they used to cover most of Manchester from a high hill outside, using a mere 4 watt
transmitter with directional gain aerial. If you can get up into mountainous area you're even better off
and can adopt classical guerrilla tactics, often see the enemy coming distances away, and be very
difficult to stop.

On a hill within the town or city use good lookouts, escape routes, CB's etc. and have regular
'escape drills'. Best place for aerial is a high, easily climbable tree. If its not too obvious leave it up
there and have a spare ready. An added problem with hills is that you normally have to lug at least one
car battery about, which is terrible if you have to climb fences, ditches etc. at night, something like a
pram or shopping trolley can help. You can't leave the batteries on site as they need re-charging for
your next broadcast. So mains electric is a big help if you can run a lead from somewhere. Outdoors
all your gear must be in waterproof cases, or covered with a tent or tarp. Tents are good if you can
pretend to be camping. Take care also of yourself and your group. Hot drinks, food, waterproofs,
short shifts for lookouts etc. are good ideas. It gets boring after a few hours. CB's are excellent, but
get ones with earphones if possible to avoid noise.

If on a hill you can also use ordinary house, flat, squat or derelict, and just set up your aerial as
high as practicable on the roof. Its better to get a place, by squatting or if you're rich, by renting,
specially as a broadcast site, no-one likes to live under constant threat of the police storming in. In
practice you may have to use someone's house, then don't use it too often. If you must use your own
house DON'T leave dope, stolen goods, false ID's or other naughties lying about. It is possible to run
your antenna cable from your house to the aerial on another roof, and whip the cable off quick if they
come, but this would only work once, and you lose output power with every extra Meter of coax cable
going to your aerial. More of this in the 'How to get away with it' section. NEVER have your studio at
the broadcast site. They'll confiscate the lot, under the new laws.

OTHER POSSIBLE BROADCASTING SITES

FESTIVALS, especially large free festivals are an excellent and common broadcast site. A small 4
watt rig will do fine. Set up on a high ground in a tent or vehicle and invite the festival attendees to
protect you from possible police attack, much more unlikely in these circumstances. If possible make a
live studio in a tent, caravan or truck and get everyone involved. Try to get mentioned in pre-festival
publicity, or do your own, so people will bring radios. This is pirate radio at its best.

DEMOS, especially long ones, like blockades for e.g. of Nuclear Stations or War bases, can be
equally worthwhile. In this context the pirate can be perfect medium for discussion, information and
warnings of police movements, as well as for entertainment and music.

BARRICADED SQUATS OR SQUATTED VENUES are another obvious and much underused site
for the guerrilla pirate, especially during big meetings or gigs, which you can broadcast live from the
roof. This has been done successfully for instance in Amsterdam and Berlin.

OCCUPIED FACTORIES or industrial areas during strikes and disputes provide an excellent and
often missed opportunity for the more political pirate group, and can provide vital communication for
mobilizing, publishing and gaining support. There have been many such opportunities in Britain over
recent years.

SIT-INS and protest occupations are another good possibility, which we don't think has been tried.
Especially occupations of high towers, buildings or pylons for publicity. But in this situation
capture is pretty certain, therefore a small disposable transmitter would be ideal. A good strategy is for
everyone to deny using it, and to use any following trial for more publicity e.g. on the lines that the
army etc. and the police are already hogging most of the airwaves.

'NO-GO AREAS' are a step up from occupied factories. We know for instance that nationalist pirates
broadcast from Free Derry and parts of West Belfast when they were 'no-go areas' to the state. Of
course there are no true 'no-go areas' in Britain, but there are plenty of inner city estates where the
police rarely venture, especially in the evenings in the riot session, for fear of 'concrete rain' or
worse from the roofs. A high block on such area could be an excellent site, especially if you can tip off
the local youth to lend a hand. Whenever major rioting begins large areas are suddenly devoid of
police, till they can group in numbers and re-take the area. This is another opportunity for 'on the
ball' local pirates. By monitoring police radio, runners, and phoned in reports such 'uprising radio' could
be a brilliant aid

to the fighters on the streets though you would need good security, disposable transmitter, quick
getaway routes, disguised voices etc.

LIBERATED ZONES! (Let us know if you find one!) Practically every guerrilla or Nat. Liberation
movement, be they right or left wing, has their own pirate radios, which are often crucial influence in
such wars, broadcasting from freed zones or neighboring countries. But you're not likely to come
across this in Britain.

INTERNATIONAL WATERS is of course a favorite site, but out of the question for the small 'do it
yourself' pirate.

How to set up your gear (FM)

BEFORE YOU GO

Before getting out you had best brief anyone, especially newcomers, on what will or might happen. Talk
about getting caught, for instance have good excuses made up for being at or near the site. If you are
planning to give false names, for instance, you'll need an address where someone will confirm you
live, otherwise you might have troubles getting bail if you were arrested. In this case keep your first
names the same to avoid being caught out.

Make out a standard 'check list' of all you need, and go through it before you get out. It's surprisingly
easy to find yourself on top of a tower block, or climbing some tree, only to discover that your cassette
deck lead is at home five miles away.

HERE'S A SAMPLE LIST OF THINGS YOU NEED

Transmitter (TX), TX main lead or 2 clip on battery leads (large and well insulated), TX lead to
cassette deck if not attached, cheap cassette deck plus mains lead or 2 clip ons and 6 volt bike battery,
charged up 12 volt car battery if not on mains, antenna (check you have butterfly bolts if collapsible), the
coaxial cable (with plug attached and clips or attached to aerial), fused plug board (if on mains),
program tapes (rewound to staring position), small FM radio receiver(s) to monitor broadcasts, CB's
for lookouts, plastic 'gaffer tape', soldering iron and solder in ease of broken leads, torch, warm clothes,
munches, bus fare.

ON THE WAY

Ideally you need four people, at least two. Carry the gear as inconspicuously as possible, in hold alls
or plastic bags. The antenna is a problem. If it's a big long one make it collapsible using butterfly nuts
in assembly. Or try to keep it somewhere close to the site. On arrival at the site, especially if you've
used it before, send an empty-handed scout ahead, to be sure the police and DTI aren't waiting for you
and all is clear. Check also you're not followed.

SETTING UP

In the case of a tower block you should have been there beforehand and have either a key or a broken
lock to get straight onto the roof. Lock the door quietly behind you. If there's two doors onto the roof
have access through both. Take your gear to a lift/heating room and find a plug in wall socket (if on
mains). Check it works. Wear gloves when handling gear, and clean it regularly with cloth and alcohol.
They don't usually bother with fingerprint evidence, but they might start. The antenna must be
cleaned regularly anyway for good transmissions. Set up your antenna as high as possible, if possible
on top of an extension pole or length of scaffold pipe. Often there's a pole already, left by earlier
pirates. Attach the antenna securely, with bolts or strong gaffer tape, to a length of wood, then the
bottom of the wood to the metal pole (if there). The antenna must NOT be touching or blocked by
metal. The coax cable can be soldered or bolted onto the antenna, or attached with strong, rust free car
battery clips.

The clips are recommended for fast dismantling and for testing and developing antennas, mark clearly
which goes where. The coax cable should not be longer than absolutely necessary, you lose power
with every extra foot, and should be good quality and well insulated. Your lookouts should already be
on station, with torches or CB's, one at the foot of the tower (preferably sitting on a car or flat) and one
on the roof. Keep low and quiet and wear soft shoes. (In one court case Eric Gotts (head of DTI
squads) claimed he recognized an Our Radio member from the ground, 18 stories up, at night. The
judge accepted his word.)

When the antenna is up securely, lead the coax back and plug or screw in to the back of your
transmitter . Now plug the TX to the cassette deck keeping the two as far as possible apart, if
possible blocked by something solid, like a wall, to avoid interference. Keep the audio lead well
away from the power leads.

Interference between leads can often cause loss of power and/or 'Sprogs' (unwanted signals on the wrong
frequency). You can go so far as to block leads from each other with bricks.

Plug in the cassette deck and the TX to your plug board (or connect to batteries) and switch on. If
you have that facility just switch on the exciter stage of the TX first for testing, no need to alert Big
Brother prematurely. Go on the other end of the roof with your radio receiver and tune in. Then
adjust the modulation on your TX, in relation of other channels, to get the best sound. If this is OK
but there's unusual knocking or crackling sounds try moving the cassette deck further from the TX, or
raise it above ground if possible. Try further separating or screening the power lines from the audio
lines.

You may well find that you have sprogs (harmonics or spurious signals) all over the band. Check
for this. If so check reception with your lookout 100 yards away, normally such sprogs disappear by
that distance and you're OK. But if your signal is still spread all over further away switch off and clear
off. Your TX is messed up and needs difficult repair or tuning you can't do on the site. If you find
you're interfering with fire, ambulance or pigs, stop, before they come after you. Most pirates are very
careful not to do this.

When all checks are OK, insert your program tape, switch off, and wait for the agreed time to
begin. With practice you can easily set it all up and test it in 10 minutes, but it's good to allow a half
hour and to be methodical and cool. Never, for instance, switch on your TX without the antenna
attached, you'll blow it. The amp stage of your TX should get quite hot when drawing the power,
if not its not working. With bigger transmitters you may need also a small electric fan to cool the
heatsinks on the power transistors. Once you're on air its good to go and phone friends for reception
reports further afield.

Broadcasting.... How to get away with it

KNOW YOUR ENEMY

On a tower block, in London, the DTI squads can tell where you are, within 20 meters, less than 10
minutes after you switch on.

So they can bust you any time. In the case of new pirates the procedure is to monitor you for a
while (in case you're just messing about) before busting you. It could easily be a few months before
your first attempted bust. If you play anything but straight music they will record and keep all your
programs for possible further use against you (though voice print's aren't used in court). In other cities
they are generally slower to get after you. In smaller towns they don't have permanent staff so they have
to come specially, depending on your usual broadcasting time, so switching your time is a big
advantage.

The detection squads are now directed by the Home Office through the Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI) and are officially responsible for stamping out 'radio interference'. They have recently
been recognized and upgraded with fancy new equipment. Their HQ is at Waterloo House by
Waterloo Bridge and they have several other fixed triangulation stations in London, for instant
tracking. They use also mobile detection vans and lots of unmarked cars and have a depot in East
London for vehicles and gear. We don't know where they keep their extensive horde of stolen
transmitters prior to disposal. They also have their own radio frequencies, they used to be (and still
may be) using around 88 MHz, just off the commercial FM band.

The DTI squads are not supposed to arrest you, so they have to bring the local filth along on busts,
which makes them a lot easier to spot and makes them less flexible, as they often have to wait till the
cops have the time free. For large rich commercial pirates the game is to have plenty of transmitters
lined up, and not to try to save them if the police and DTI raid. They often use remote links and can
often switch on and off using timers or radio signals, so they don't have to go back and change tapes
and no one need get caught in the act (but recently the DTI have cracked this by raiding the 'live
studios' and nicking everyone and everything).

But for small community / political pirates with only one or two transmitters its essential to save the
gear if at all possible. At the same time its now always cheaper to lose all the gear than to get caught
and pay the fines. Nowadays even for the small pirate it may be more advisable to put energy into money
raising and mass producing cheap transmitters than into trying to save the gear when they're hot on
your trail (though you need to guard anyway against the curious and rip-offs by other pirates.)

PRECAUTIONS

Don't talk and boast unnecessarily about your sites or studio. Work on a 'need to know' basis from
the start. One method is to keep program makers separate from your broadcasting team, tapes can even
be delivered to a 'dead letter drop' for instance. But if you can really trust each other its better if
everyone takes a turn at broadcasting, otherwise the broadcasters can both get pissed off and
become a power elite ('I'm not transmitting this crap!').

Don't, of course, broadcast your location, real names or addresses. Don't give your phone
number either, certainly in Britain, the days of phone-ins and instant access to pirates are numbered.
If you're really into phone-ins, get a phone in a false name at a temporary address or squatted flat (NOT
your studio).

Tape the calls and check you're not followed there. For letters use a box address (e.g. Wuppertal in
Germany) and assume all mail is read, or use a forwarding address. When travelling to sites vary your
means of transport.

The raid..... Saving the gear

A.) HIDING IT ON THE SITE

Some pirates have tried building the transmitter into walls, parapets, roof, chimney stacks etc. You
can conceal it under water tanks, central heating or lift machinery. Better still have it hidden in a legal
or squatted top floor flat (possibly 2nd to top would do) concealing your coax cable either up the side of
the building, by boring a hole in the roof, or by running it up ventilation or 'stink' pipes. Another
variation is to have your tape player in a flat, and a long concealed audio lead to the TX on the roof.
The possibilities are endless, and most have been tried. On one occasion Our Radio tried the 'dummy
transmitter' trick, with it's own dummy aerial, leading the hounds to one end of the roof, while they
left by another door. Inside the transmitter box was a can of beer and a 'Booby Prize' note. In all these
cases you still need to at least remove your coax cable before the cop arrive, or of course it'll lead
straight to your TX.

B.) LOOKOUTS

You need two, preferably three, and take it in turns, and if possible also monitor police and DTI
radio channels. You can use torches or signals from ground to roof. If on CB's turn them very low or use
headphones, and use codewords, they're very public.

Watch out for cars and vans with too many aerials, electrical gear in the passenger seat, hanging
around trying not to look suspicious, police cars passing several times etc. Keep an eye on nearby
tower blocks or anywhere they may observe the roof with field glasses. A raid is usually obvious, two
or three cars with uniformed police accompanying them (though piggies may be also in an unmarked
car). They usually try and rush in a side or a back entrance, so watch out... it's quite embarrassing to
have all your friends nicked, and you still standing out front yawning! Usually they take the lift
(sometimes using a 'fireman's key' to bring it down fast) and often send a few young ones up the
stairs.

C.) CAT AND MOUSE

This involves moving and hiding the gear, in flats, stair cupboards, lift shafts, hanging out
windows, disguised as something else, etc. Normally they have no case if they can't find it, but under
the new laws they might try to do you anyway if you're caught. If your lookout system works you have
at least 2 minutes warning before they reach the top of the tower block. You can delay them by switching
off the power in the lift room, but if doing this be quite certain you're not trapping anyone, which is
difficult. You can call the lift immediately, and if you get them first jam the doors open. You should
practice for quick dismantling and packing of the gear in advice. Sometimes its easier to leave the
antenna and build a new one. A good simple 'Cat and Mouse' is to run down several flights of stairs
with the gear, hide it in a good spot (the ideal is the flat of a 'neutral' friend) and turn into a 'normal'
citizen. If you're stopped have a good excuse for being there. Cat and Mouse is a good system to start
off with. But remember they have done it 1000s of times before. When they become determined to
bust you you'll need more and more determined people and new broadcasting sites to stay ahead. After a
certain point they're sure to catch you, as they learn more about you, your faces, your habits, your
tricks, and as they put more and more men on the case. If you want to get away with it its time for a
complete change of tactics.

D.) DISAPPEARING

When the DTI are really on your tail one thing you can do is take a weeks rest, then come back with
a different name, style and timing. Of course this messes up your efforts to make a name for
yourselves and gain a regular audience, but at least you're still on air, with maybe a few months grace
before they start after you again. Also change your frequency and voices on tape if possible.

E.) SWITCHING

In theory this is a good system, but you need a big team, your own transport, and two or three
transmitters (on the exact same wavelength). The idea is this... as the police and DTI close in on one
location, the signal switches to a second site. Either you're using links, or have copies of the program
tapes. The team at the first site evades the police and sets off a 3rd site and sets up. If they go for the
2nd site you switch to the 3rd site and carry on etc. When combined to Cat and Mouse tactics this can
make you difficult to stop. The problems are, if you're using tower blocks your choices are limited... If
you set up say 5 miles away your reception area may be completely different, and you'll need plenty of
dedicated people ready to wait night after night to play games with the police... And when they become
determined they will still get you. We know of one South London pirate, who used switching with
apparent success, then one night all 3 of their transmitters were seized within 15 minutes! Switching
would work better when combined and varied with other methods of getting away with it. Particularly
if you're doing a local station, where you don't need so much height, and have lots of more choice of
broadcasting sites.

F.) GUERRILLA RADIO

This is one of the main ideas this text is trying to promote. Guerrilla, or Hit and Run radio is the
war of the flea. First of all you can reduce the risks of getting caught drastically by broadcasting not
a fixed times or a fixed name, or by doing it only for 1/2 hour periods. The problem of course is that
your audience is also random and small. The guerrilla idea is to get together quite a few stations,
broadcasting on the same frequency with cheap, mass produced transmitters, thus forming one big loose
station which listeners would have a good chance of finding on air, while being very difficult for the
DTI and police to stop.

BREAK-INS

Break-ins are a higher and riskier form of guerrilla radio, as used in Britain by Radio Arthur and
Radio Wapping. The idea is to grab your audience by broadcasting on top of a legal station. The
sentences are much higher but there's little chance of getting caught if your break-ins short, say for
five minutes, on top of the news or advertising of a major station. You're taking advantage of a
quality of FM broadcasting that the stronger signal tends to 'win', blotting out the weaker one
completely. With a small transmitter you'll only win for a short distance, but even a few hundred yards
could cover a whole high density estate. For break-ins strength of signal is the main factor, a big
powerful transmitter (100-200 watts) tuned exactly to the required frequency so you can break in for your
message on the most popular channel on prime time. For break-ins all precautions should be doubled,
also be sure to clear right away from the area as soon as you've finished, and don't use the same time or
broadcasting site again. It's as simple as that.

Break-ins are also easily possible on TV, but only over the sound. Break-ins are more common in
countries where pirates have been repressed, e.g. in Germany or the Eastern Block, and are ideal for
announcing, demonstrations etc.

There is another and better way of doing break-ins on FM, which may have been used by Radio
Arthur. This is to use the UHF microwave transmitter, beaming your signal at the microwave dish
receiving the signals of a legal station from their studios. Their dish then picks up your signal, and
providing you're close enough to be stronger than their signal, you get re-broadcast by their main
transmitter, thus giving your break-ins perfect coverage throughout their reception area. However, we
don't have technical plans to build such tricky UHF transmitters, and it would be quite expensive.
Though this type of break-ins is possibly at present. (To stop you fast they'd have to switch off the entire
station.) They will probably make it more difficult by using access codes to receiver dishes, as its
already done to avoid piracy of satellite dishes. NOTE: Don't play around with microwaves, they can be
dangerous!

GOING MOBILE

In theory this is an ideal way of getting away with it, but there are quite a few problems. If you're going
in a vehicle you can use ordinary car cassette player, but you are better off having a separate 12 volt
car battery to power the transmitter.

One problem is with the aerial. If you use a bigger, more efficient one it will be very obvious, one
possibility is to have it under a tarpaulin on a roof rack. A bigger problem is height, unless you can
park or drive up and down on a high hill, your coverage will be badly blocked. And then of course your
reception area will vary radically if you're driving any distance. Not much use for gaining or developing
an audience. The main advantage is that you will be much more difficult to stop.

Going mobile is more practical as a publicity stunt, or possibly for local broadcasts. To a small extent,
having a bigger TX will compensate for lack of height. Going mobile is good for broadcasting at
random just for the hell with it.

Doing break-ins in this way would be great fun in the rush hour traffic.

LINKS, TIMERS, SQUARE WAVES

These aren't for the shoestring pirate, though you can build them cheap if you have the know-how. As
we said earlier links often prevent you being busted personally, if you can afford to lose the gear, and
allow you to do live programs. All it involves is using a receiver instead of a cassette deck, then
beaming up your signal from your studio, or whatever, using a small UHF transmitter (e.g. on
370 MHz) or adapted cordless telephone, or an FM exciter on a different frequency (or even an
ordinary phone line, though sound quality suffers). You also have to make a small directional high gain
antenna. If you're using a low power link and a narrow beam its highly impossible for the DTI to trace
you, and it was assumed to be safe to link from the studio. But recently studios using links have
been raided, in a few cases, with every bit of equipment, furniture, record collections etc. seized under
the 1984 laws (e.g. a raid on Radio Horizon's studios in late 1895 when over £20000 worth of gear was
'stolen' legally).

This may not however mean that the DTI's new gear can detect links. It's just as easy to find your
location by gossip, phone taps or just by following you. Links can make you personally safe, if they can
trace you one you could always use two, or three, or .... what they don't and can't do is protect your
transmitter, its main advantage is that it allows you to go live from the studio.

To protect yourself you might as well use a timer to switch the gear on and off remotely. Timers are
pretty easy to build, and you can buy kits, but good ones are hard to find 'off the shelf' as they can
obviously be used to make bombs. A good one to buy is the plug in variety, used for fooling burglars
when you're on holidays, or by landlords to deter squatters. For remote switching you can also make
sound activated switches, via a radio link, or 'square wave' switches, via a phone line. What none of
these devices can do however is to turn over the tape, so you still have to go to the site to do this, unless
you want to broadcast for less than an hour.

CONFRONTATION

A good trick if you can get away with it. The DTI and police (they normally only bring a few) are
wide open to attack (the mouse becomes the cat!) when coming to get you. The problem is that in
future you'll have to change your station name, frequency, even your radio voice and they'll always be
on your trail. The good thing is that if pirates start attacking them they have to bring many more
police with them, and can only do it when spare police are available. Also they are always looking over
their shoulders, and have to be more careful with their surveillance work. One way to hit back, on tower
blocks, is to trap them in the lifts. The lookouts signals up when they're in and you throw the main
power switches in the lift room. Be careful you don't trap residents as well. Then you take your gear
down the stairs, beating up any of them you meet on the way, and make off. Their cars are also
vulnerable, usually they're parked unguarded around the corner. If you're going to attack them directly
make sure you're well masked and tooled up and have enough skill and numbers to get past them. Go
straight for the police officers and disable them before they can make their 'officer in distress' call (take
or smash their radios, or have someone jamming their frequencies). Other direct ways of hitting back
are attacking the DTI at their bases, attacking their vehicles at the depot, obtaining home addresses /
phone numbers of chief officers and harassing them etc.

Remember they have the entire state apparatus backing them up, any form of direct attack should
therefore be anonymous and never spoken of or boasted about later (or before!).

When the lookout signals a raid or anything very suspicious (e.g. a cop car cruising too close too often)
immediately switch off, dismantle the gear and move it (switch off the TX first, then the tape deck.
DON'T rip out the aerial when the TX is still switched on!)

Building your pirate station

We're not talking here about commercial pirates, where its just a matter of having good financial
backing, popular DJ's and hit records, plenty of ads, jingles and news replayed from legal
stations.

We're talking about the 'do-it-yourself' community or political pirate, starting from square one, and
doing something worthwhile and original. The truth is that most commercial pirates, in their effort to
offend nobody and build towards a possible license, practice heavy censorship and are often as
boring, banal, repetitive, capitalist, sexist, elitist and even anti-democratic as the legal ones, though
there are few exceptions. Such pirates are obsessed with keeping their technology secret and attacking
the competition at every opportunity.

Smaller, non-commercial pirates are in a different situation and can only survive and develop by
cooperation, with the eventual aim of breaking the state and commercial monopoly of 'Her
Majesty's' airwaves.

YOURSELF

First thing you need is an interest in sound, and something worth saying or playing. Get a hold of a
mike and a cassette deck and play around with it. Record yourself, record any and everything.

Listen and record off the radio, off TV, off people's stereos, in the street. Play back your results, see
where you went wrong, and try again. Note down your results and ideas and discuss them with others.
Read everything you can find about sound and recording and think about why you want to be a radio
pirate. Join the Free The Airwaves campaign and read their 'Radio Crimes' bulletins.

THE GROUP

You need to find more people with similar ideas, and not just 'hangers on'. You need to get to know
each other well, find out who you can trust, and ditch those you can't. Members should be prepared
to share in the tasks, risks and finances equally according to their abilities (in practice this rarely
happens).

Hold regular meetings, just keeping in touch can be a problem in big cities. Go for maximum
openness so everyone knows what is going on. Beware of the power freaks, ego trippers, party builders
etc. who are sure to turn up sooner or later.

A good point to start is with fund raising, arranging gigs, jumble sales, meetings, sponsored events or
whatever, which can cement your group, attract more people, and advertise your station. How you do
it depends a lot on the type of project you're doing. If for example you're planning a minority
language station (and there's millions in Britain who have no radio in their first language) you'll
want to advertise widely through ethnic organizations. If you're a 'revolutionary' group planning to
claim responsibility for armed actions you won't want to advertise at all. Minority music stations are
the most common. But we'd advice you to widen and deepen your group, or join with others, if you're
going to build and maintain the commitment (and cash) to keep a station going. Many music stations
get backing from clubs, and are the platform for the disgustingly egotistical and inane DJ's who work in
those clubs. Such solid backing is a good idea however. If you're running a station, you'll be hard pushed
to fund a raise as well. If you see your station as a part of a wider movement (e.g. anti-war, women,
gay, anarchist, animal rights etc.) you should try to get regular backing from that movement. Another
good trick is to siphon off small amounts of cash regularly from council, charity or student union
funded bodies which your members are involved in. What you need is income, not a lot, even £20 a
week would do if regular. If some of your members have good jobs they might be able to do it,
otherwise you could be tied in with a money making co-op or small business. One example of this is
the squatters pirates in Amsterdam, who can get a small regular income from a fund raised by a small
tax on drink in squatted pubs and cafes.

OPEN ACCESS

Once your group is going well, and you've started to make tapes and get the gear and cash together,
you should think seriously about teaming up with other groups who you broadly agree with (or don't
disagree). For example at the moment (late 1986) there are dozens of such groups who have failed to
get Community Radio licenses and are dying to get their stuff on air, though afraid to 'go pirate' in their
present hostile climate.

The idea of 'Open Access' is to share a frequency, studios and even transmitting gear to start with,
with different groups. The advantages are obvious... more money coming in from more sources, less
equipment needed to begin with, a pooling of technical abilities, more political clout, more
participation, bigger audiences etc. A good way to approach this idea is by having public meetings,
contact Free The Airwaves campaign etc.

The problems come with coordination, political rivalry, possible infiltration and the sharing of tasks.
For an Open Access grouping you need regular democratic meetings of all involved (at least monthly)
and insist on full attendance. You need a few good people who are into organizing it and making it
work. Another problem is with broadcasting. You should aim for everyone having their own gear and
broadcast team as soon as you can, so you will be more difficult to stop by the police and DTI. So you
should insist on every group producing tapes providing at least two trusted people regularly both to the
broadcast team and to work on the technical and backup side of it (building, repairing, purchasing
etc.).

Open Access station depend on cooperation, if you have that then all the other advantages come into
play, but you are fighting all the time against our training, in this society, to be competitive and
individualist. The ideas of Open Access radio have been pioneered in this country by stations like
Sheffield Peace Radio, Our Radio and Cambridge Community Radio and its worth studying their
experience quite closely, as well as the example of such stations and Federations of pirates in other
countries. Its often fatal to allow one person, however benevolent they may seem, to become a leader
or spokesperson for an Open Access grouping. The straight media also love this to happen.

LOCAL / "COMMUNITY" PIRATE RADIO

The word 'community' has lost any real meaning, through misuse and over-use (e.g. 'Community
Policing'). The old style communities are thing of the past (if they ever really existed) except on the
Soap Operas, as the system breaks us all down into individual consumers. So if you're talking about
'Community Radio' you should be quite clear what you mean by it, and what the State means by
proposing (and then cancelling) such an ideas. What class, ethnic, interest, political or gender sections
of the people are you aiming your pirate radio at? Or better, creating your pirate radio with? Or are
you really working on your own career? Or trying to create 'community' in your own head?....

Local pirate radio is a more clear idea. There are many advantages to broadcasting locally, e.g. more
broadcasting sites, harder to get caught, room for more pirates on the broadcast band, cheaper and
easier to built transmitters, closer contact and participation of listeners etc. In a big city it's a good idea
for your station to base yourselves in one area, whether you're broadcasting locally or city-wide.
You need a local base, and local backing, financial if possible. If your station is appealing to one small
section of listeners it may not however make sense to do a local station, because the potential listeners
are fewer. A local station should aim at a fairly wide section of the population. An Open Access
station would work well on a local basis, as coordination would be easier, and all kinds of interest and
minority groups could be persuaded to make programs. On a local basis publicity and support are
much easier to get, as is the possibility of mobilizing people to defend you when attacked, e.g. a
popular station in the middle of the large housing estate. Local broadcasting in inner city areas can
nevertheless involve hundreds of thousands of potential listeners. Most of the smaller existing pirates
are, in effect, local stations, because of the limitations of height and the power of their transmitters,
though very few allow any access or see themselves as a local voice and resource.

How to make a studio

Back to square one, you've fooled around with tapes and microphones, but soon you're going to
want your own studio. If you have no cash don't let that stop you! Most of the gear can be borrowed
to start off with. For beginners purpose a studio is a small room, a couple of turntables and cassette
decks, a microphone, headphones, and a small disco mixer, a plug board, leads, some records and a
table to put it all on. You'll also need some blank cassette tapes, and sound effects records if you can
(borrow from a record library).

After that it's just practice and patience, knowing and collecting your material, and getting more or
better sound gear as you go along.

Having said that there's plenty of tips we can give you. A permanent room is handy. Sound proof
it if you can, cardboard, layers of carpet, egg boxes or Styrofoam are all good. Try to plan it out before
you start as to have everything within reach of the operator(s), while having enough room for the
interviews and group work. If you build your own control desk you can drill holes and arrange for all
the leads to disappear and join underneath, much less hassle. If you're buying cassette decks try to get
something also suitable for outdoor work. Try it out before buying, e.g. don't get one which leaves a
loud click on the recording whenever you lift the pause button. Quality and editing are better if you
record your final product from mixer onto a reel to reel tape recorder, though it means re-
recording onto cassettes for broadcasting, and a good cassette deck can give near as good results
and is cheaper. If buying a microphone it's worth getting a good directional one suitable for studio and
outdoor interviews, and make sure the 'impedance' suits your mixer. A 'cheap' £50 disco mixer will
do the job (you can even mix through some stereo units). If you have the cash go for the flashy new £150
range with built in graphic equalizer with which you can do wonders. Another tip, keep mike leads, din
leads and power leads well separate each other and make sure everything is well grounded (from the
chassis if necessary). If you also have 'hum' problems with cassette decks try plugging in the power lead
the other way round (i.e. where it goes into deck). Use cheap turntables, not automatics, and buy ones
which use cheap cartridges, as you'll have to replace them often anyway. Use good quality cassette tapes
however. C120's are best for length of program, but get the best or they'll tear or jam. On the turntables
put in your own on-off 'cue' switches, for ease of operation. When you've 'cued' a record to where you
want to start, turn it a full turn back, by hand, to avoid slow start up noise. Try and have an LED meter
on the mixer and on the final tape recorder, allow the needle to go just into the red for music recording,
but only half way up for speech recording. For group interviews an omnidirectional mike can be handy,
and pay special attention to sound recording levels and background noise.

Don't use telephone in the studio. Though the phone is the lifeline of democratic radio, in the present
climate it means you'll be busted and/or have everything in the room recorded by the police.... You
really do need two turntables, and at least two cassette decks... All these tips, and more you'll pick up
as you go along, but it's good to work out standard 'how to use the studio' for newcomers. Pay
attention to safety, e.g. have the plugboard (fused) well out of the way, and don't allow coffee or beer
near the gear. Read a book on basic sound studios.

One last tip, lock it up well, especially if it's not in your own home, and barricade and cover any
windows. there's one sure thing about accumulating sound gear... sooner or later someone will nick
it!

The program

This is entirely up to yourself. No need to follow any conventions. Some people say have to
'master' conventional programming before you can do something different. Other say if you do that
you'll never do anything different.

Again there are some hard learned tips for pirate. It's good to talk with all concerned before starting,
make a list of all the possible material gathered (music, interviews, sound effects, news items, jokes or
whatever) and try to put it into some kind of order. A signature tune or jingle isn't such a bad idea, as
people recognize the program by it, often after they've forgotten the name. Repeat the name of your
program often, but not too often, along with your frequency and broadcast time.

Put your important items first (e.g. a demo next day, your appeal etc.) as it's always possible you
may be busted before the program ends. If you're excepting a bust put all your best material first and
keep the Word is invalid, but it is short. Use first names (false ones) and try to have a friendly, relaxed
atmosphere and give everyone present a go on the microphone and control desk. While throwing out
conventions don't forget that we're all conditioned to quick variety and short attention spans. Long
single person interviews are not on, no matter how interesting, but need breaking up, also remember
people are continually tuning in (and out) and if doing long pieces you need to 'flash back' the story
so far. You need variety and interaction without sticking in jingles every 30 seconds. Try and make it
interesting / enjoyable / entertaining both for you and the audience, otherwise why to bother?...

Style and themes are your department. It's easy on radio to get arrogantly carried away with an idea of
your own ego, or with 'in' jokes or political hobby horse, watch out for this.

Practice with using the gear, good preparation and research make everything go much smoothly.
Background music and fading music in and out can be very effective if done well. A large studio, tea
breaks etc. help a lot. The more time you put in the better the result (usually), you can spend a whole
night making a good one hour current affairs program, for instance.

More than that is hard to say, so much depends on the people, the subject, the projected audience, the
time of broadcast etc. You should actively go out and seek feedback and opinions from people you
know have listened. Probably you won't bee able to do phone ins and mail is slow and erratic (don't
worry if you don't get a big mailbag, few stations or programs really do). It's easy to become cut off and
feel like you're talking into a vacuum, or get completely wrong idea of what kind of people are
listening.

Making programs is really not that hard, however bad an inexperienced you are, you can quite
easily improve on some of the 'aural shit' being pumped out by legal stations over the airwaves, 24 hours
per day!

Publicity

Publicity is very important, especially when you're starting off your new station. Of course your main
publicity is to keep coming back on air, no matter what. But if you're hoping for a minority audience to
tune in specially you need to advertise a lot where those people are likely to see or read it. Be warned,
there's no real tradition in this country for large scale support for pirates, and people often tend to
consume the media i.e. forget instantly they switch off. It could take you long time to build up the
regular, participate audience, and the solid support you need to attract new blood, break even financially
etc.

If you're a local station your publicity is obviously a lot easier, and you can poster, graffiti, or even
leaflet your entire reception area. If you're a wider station make sure you're always mentioned in the
'what's on' papers and get articles or interviews into any paper likely to support you. Send out regular
press releases to the local and national press, and try to cultivate contacts among the slimy reptiles
(journalists). Almost any publicity is good, as those people likely to listen in to you will also likely read
behind the bias of Tory press. Oddly, one place you should certainly seek publicity is on radio, try for
instance getting onto phone ins. On radio you are already talking to people who listen to it! TV, if you
can find any way to stunt to get onto it, is the most powerful publicity and you should certainly court the
bastards running the local TV news, this kind of appearance really does stick in people's minds and
start them talking...

Strangely enough the media are not overly hostile to pirates, providing you're just an oddity, not a
direct threat. Many media workers hate the shit they're forced to produce and admire the 'romantic'
pirates. You should play on this for all it's worth, and always try and get your frequency and broadcast
times across. They will sometimes put you on, as an interesting item. Remember that pirate radio is a
'victimless crime'! If you're mainly a music station you should publicize where people listen to that type
of music, if you have your own club, of course, you're laughing. Join Free The Airwaves and get
publicity in their paper. Write articles for radio pages, and do benefit gigs, public meetings, media
stunts, whatever you can manage.

Choose a catchy, hard hitting name for your station. If you're doing political stuff they're going to go
for you anyway, so you might as well get value for effort!

Remember, if you want to be a participatory station, you'll have to go out and seek feedback. Get
out on the street and do interviews whatever you can. Take along your cassette recorder to every type
of event, the more different voices and views the better.

Building up your pirate station

It's hard to give advice about longer term development, but there's a few things worth saying. First
of all it's important to pace yourselves. It's easy to start off with a lot of enthusiasm, then get busted off
the air, or just burnt out with too much work or too few people. However good or different you are you
will be very lucky to build up a regular audience or mass support overnight. Though your potential
number of listeners may be huge you can except response to be slow. Breaking down passive
consumption of the media is not easy. Having your own clubs, events, regular demos etc. helps, as do
dramatic publicity stunts.

You need to work out what you're aiming at. We say support, participation and a large number of
listeners is a good aim. But you may just be broadcasting as a way of pressuring for a license (which
is a bit of a sell-out and a pipedream). Ideally you should plan ahead and gradually increase your
broadcasting times, while developing all aspects of your station, rather than going all out and then
collapsing at the first bust. The best advice then is to operate well within your capabilities, and to join
up with any other pirates who are not commercial and not racist, sexist or fascist. Your longer term
aim, as a pirate, should be to reach a situation where you have so much support (money, volunteers,
transmitters, listener support etc.) that the state just cannot wipe you out at will. The best hope for
pirates is to swamp the forces of repression by sheer numbers, as happened, at different times, in
Belgium, the Netherlands, France, Italy, and now, it seems, in Spain. This does not imply chaos, but
cooperation, federations and sharing of the available airwaves and times. The swamping the airwaves
is NOT going to be caused by the commercial pirates, hogging, hiding and mystifying the technology
and even sabotaging each other. However if we do manage to start a non-commercial movement of
pirates capable of doing this then commercial pirates will jump onto the airwaves, with more
power, and try to force us off. This would be a major problem.

It is a mistake and an excuse to blame the Tories and the new draconian laws for the lack of
alternative pirates in Britain. The main thing stopping us is the lack of any strong combative
movement (whether it be workers, women, anarchist, or whatever) in which to build a big wave of
pirates, though there are literally millions of sympathetic people about.

Medium wave

ADVANTAGES AND PROBLEMS

At the moment FM broadcasting, with all its advantages, is the favorite for pirates. But it's well
worth pointing out that at least 25% of radio receivers in Britain can't even receive FM, so you can't pick
up most pirates on older radios. Another thing, in some hilly areas FM broadcasts have a very bad
coverage area. And a third advantage, you can cover a very much bigger area on AM, at least potentially.
AM can be the best choice for you, especially if you're in a country area, or in hills or mountains, or
only want to broadcast by day and aren't too worried about sound quality. AM transmitters are also
fairly cheap and easy to build, and because you use a crystal there's no problem with tuning or with
'sprogs' (harmonics). Though the antenna is a huge length it's just a roll of wire, and doesn't
necessarily have to be up high, which gives you a quite different, if still limited, range of possible
broadcasting sites. AM works by bouncing radio waves back off the stratosphere, not by line of sight like
FM.

Of course there's lots of other disadvantages, one is sound quality, and stereo is out of the
question, and there's not much free space on the wave band, chiefly because of a host European
stations, which become stronger at night, blotting your relatively weak signal (this is due to atmospheric
changes we are told). The TX is also bigger and heavier (about 12" x 8" x 6") and you'll probably
need to use car batteries.

One thing I forgot, if you want to reach any of the 50000 prisoners in British jails, you must use
AM, FM is still banned in prison, for some typically petty reason.

It is also agreed that you're generally less likely to get busted. In the present repressive climate that's
well worth considering.

How to broadcast on AM (540 - 1600 kHz)

YOUR TRANSMITTER

Enough general talk. So you want to broadcast on AM. So here's how to do it. First your transmitter.
Medium Wave transmitters aren't so hard to build, any good amateur radio buff could do it, and
there's people around who will build them (reckon to spend £100 to £150). The technology is tried and
tested and our design is as good as any. The TX is valve operated and you use a crystal (which you
have to order on the chosen wave length) which keeps you on frequency without the problems of FM.
So you have to decide from the start which frequency you're going for and stick to it, or buy a new
crystal. When choosing your frequency remember that it must be divisible by 9... AM frequencies are
separated by 9 kHz by international treaty. If your signal doesn't conform you'll probably have the
DTI and police down on you faster. If you have problems getting a AM transmitter you may be able to
buy a kit or adapt an amateur radio transmitter.

ADAPTING A AM TRANSMITTER

I'm not exactly an expert on this and the following info comes from the US. Apparently you can
easily buy second hand radio ham transmitters and adapt them. The best to go for is the Viking
Valiant (200 watt) or the Viking Ranger (75 watt), both made by Johnson &amp Co. These ham
radios are well built, have excellent audio and moreover have built in VFO's (variable frequency
oscillators) which make them simple to modify to work on the top end of the AM band. All you need to
do the RF (radio frequency) circuits is to add capacitance to the 160 meter tuned circuits. And all you
must do to the audio circuits is to bypass the first pre-amp (assuming you're using a line level instead
of a mike level). One other thing, you must bypass the speech frequency filter, which is located between
the 2nd pre-amp and the driver.

When buying such a 2nd hand ham transmitter: A) Get one with 160 meter capability. B) Don't pay
more than £100 for one. C) Make sure it has plate modulation (look inside and check there are two
transformers well separated from each other). D) Don't get a 'kit built' one with strange wiring and if
possible check the valves before buying, they're rather costly.

SETTING UP YOUR AERIAL (AM)

Security precautions and preparation are the same as for FM. But there the similarity ends. For a start
your total aerial length is 1/4 your wavelength, so if your wavelength was 200 meters, for instance, your
aerial would be 50 meters long! You use a ordinary thin single strand wire. Buy a roll, keep it on the
roll and measure it out, meter by meter. Ideally the aerial would point straight up, but that's just not
feasible, unless you hang it out from the side of a tower block or a steeple, or suspend it from a balloon
(only the balloon blows away). The normal method is the 'dogleg' which works just fine. The ideal site
is a field, or deserted common land, far away from houses, with two tall trees (only 2 if possible,
poplars are best) about 30 to 40 meters apart. Now string the 'dogleg' between the trees and down to
your TX without touching branches or leaves. Sounds impossible? If you have a trained monkey that's
just fine. Otherwise try our method. Practice and patience is necessary.

Bring along with you a catapult, a long reel of 70 lb. strength fishing line, a plenty of lead fishing
weights (not too heavy for the catapult). Also some small plastic rings (cut out lids of plastic
containers work fine).

Tie one end of the fishing line to a lead weight, leaving the line coiled neatly and loosely on a piece of
bare ground. Then fore the lead weight from the catapult right over the center of a tree! Go and search
for it (don't try this at night). Tie on your plastic ring in place of the weight and pass about 30 meter of
your aerial wire through the ring. Now get your mate to pull the other end of the fishing line, if it
doesn't get tangled pull it till the ring is about 5 meters from the tree top. Tie the fishing line securely (to
the tree), cut it, and head for the second tree. Repeat the performance, firing right over the tree from
the far side. Pull the aerial end through, and this time tie it to the ring. Pull up as before to about 5 m
from the top and tie the line. Now back to the roll of aerial wire (extended with fishing line as
necessary) and start pulling it in till it's suspended without touching the trees! It's hard to get it just
right so the aerial reaches your TX and is tight, adjust fishing line lengths and/or position of TX. Better
choose two trees too far apart than too close. When you finally get it all set it's hardly worth taking it
down again after the broadcast, though you should loosen it off or it'll snap in the wind. Disguise it if
possible. A further problem can be with kids and passers by, disguise your actions, bringing along
fishing rods or a kite is a good ploy. One of the best broadcast sites is a clearing in a large wood. On
Medium Wave remember, you can go right outside the city and still cover it and lots more
besides.

SETTING UP THE GEAR

The transmitter should be on wet ground. If it's dry, wet it. Mud is good stuff. The aerial wire should
be taut all the way. Bushes are an advantage, for concealment, but don't let any touch the aerial. Your
power supply is a 12 volt car battery. Bring two, well charged up, if you're broadcasting for more than
few hours, medium wave uses a lots of power. If your TX is on mains (240 VAC) you'll have to get it
adapted using a 'rotary inverter', it's not difficult. A lorry battery is the real thing, but what a drag to
carry! If there's a chance to go on mains, by running a line from somewhere, you should go for it.
Otherwise wear old clothes and gloves against acid spills. When choosing your site balance the need
for remoteness with the problems of moving the gear.

The transmitter must be very well grounded, the earth is an essential part of the aerial system.
Use a ring of metal stakes (e.g. tent stakes) and file off any rust or dirt for good connections.
Attach the stakes securely to the chassis of your TX, with the thick metal straps or wires held by
butterfly nuts or strong clean battery clips.

So far so good. The cassette player, on the contrary, should be off the ground, on a box or whatever.
As usual keep the audio lead, battery leads and aerial wire as far apart as possible. The cassette player
is normally powered by a 6 volt motor bike battery, with suitable leads. Torch batteries are dear and
have a pathetic life-span.

SWITCHING ON

Connect up your batteries, load up your cassette player with a 'trial tape' and you're ready to go.

1) Turn tuning adjuster to the right till the meter gives the lowest reading.

2) Turn 'load' adjuster till meter rises about 50 milliamps.

3) Tune again till it drops about 25 mA.

4) Load up again as above.

5) Carry on procedure till you get a load of about 150 mA on a 20 W transmitter, or 100 mA on a 10 W
rig. Your last tuning adjustment should produce virtually no dip on the meter needle.

6) Adjust modulation in relation to other channels to get your best sound. Use a radio receiver held at
least 50 yards away for testing.

7) If there is crackling, knocking or bad sound, repeat from the beginning. Check that your stakes are in
well damp ground, that all lines are well separated, that aerial isn't touching trees, hold receiver
further away etc.

If you've done all the above you should be broadcasting loud and clear. If your signal is still wretched
chances are your crystal is burnt out, or something is blown. Then go home.

If all is well, switch off and await the time of your program is due to start. Don't detach aerial wire
with the TX still turned on.

PACKING UP

When you're finished, switch off immediately. Then disconnect everything and pack into hold-alls
or large plastic bag. Be especially careful carrying the TX with it's delicate valves. You should have
several sites, and switch as often as you can. Don't re-use a site after an attempted bust. If you have a
good dry safe stash and are coming back best leave your transmitter, cassette deck and leads there,
and just take the batteries back for recharging. Such a stash should be in cover, be quite sure a
hidden watcher or bud with binoculars couldn't spot you stashing the gear. It's likely that the DTI will
send in men to sneak up and watch you, prior to planning a bust, so be careful, even when not on air,
don't relax till safely home.

WHEN ON AIR, PRECAUTIONS (AM)

Read the FM chapter 'How to get away with it'. A lot of those precautions also apply.

At a AM site your chances should be much better, you need on person just to stay near the TX, in
case of kids, passers by etc. and to grab or hide it fast when they get the danger signal. On many sites
you can work out lookout points to give plenty of warning. However you might as well abandon the
batteries, and certainly the aerial, if you have to run far. If you have transport or good escape
routes you can try a clean getaway, but safer method is to hide the gear well (not too close to the aerial if
it's left up) and beat it. We favor bunkers, holes pre-dug and lined with waterproofs, under rocks, with
heavy lids covered with earth and bushes. In theory they could find these with dogs or metal detectors,
but we've never heard of them succeeding or even trying (you could always bury bits of metal all over
the place).

The possibilities are unlimited, if you're on the ball there's no reason they should get the gear... and
without that they have a lousy case against you.

Busts.... If all goes wrong

You're nicked. What you say to them depends on the circumstances. If they haven't got you, deny it
point blank, give them your cover story and a verifiable address, and stick to your story no matter what.
The problem with this is if they have nicked others and they give different stories, a different name for you
etc. Best discuss all this beforehand. If caught on the hop, best say you don't know any of the others.
You're caught in the act or with the gear. Give them a verifiable name and address and refuse to
discuss the matter further. No matter what. People have managed to get off in the past, even with the
gear in their hands, but under the new laws this is unlikely.

Although they can arrest and charge you, illegal broadcasting is still normally treated as a 'summons
offense', which means they question you, let you go (eventually), then summons you by letter to appear
in court. This opens possibilities of getting away with it - you may be able to snow them with a false
name etc. (though they can now hold you on suspicion of doing this for three days). They will normally
'ask to accompany to the station', or if they've raided your flat may interrogate you there and then. If
you refuse to go to the station they will arrest you (for obstruction, insulting words, suspicion of stealing
electricity etc.) and take you there, where you can be interviewed by the police and DTI. The 'pretext
charge' is often dropped later. When interviewed on the station it's better really to refuse to say
anything, especially if there are several of you, cover stories usually fall apart under long and detailed
questioning. However silence usually means they will hold you longer. If they get you to the station they
are pretty certain to photograph and fingerprint you. You can't refuse under the Police Bill.

When nicked your best bet is to remain calm. Demand to ring your solicitor. Don't panic, it's not the
end of the world. Smile at the bastards. Have a good time in the cell -you've done your best.

Fighting your case

It's usually months before your summons arrives, if they decide they have a case. Get legal aid if at
all possible, and a good solicitor who knows the, by now, pretty complex legal situation.

Plead NOT GUILTY, but beware if you have money, they may award costs against you if you lose.
Get your Bust Fund together, with gigs, jumble, radio appeals, donations all round etc. It's good to
campaign about your bust on the air if your station is still going. Most commercial (read conservative)
pirates don't do this, carrying their bid for respectability so far as to ignore their own best weapon. Make
sure the address you gave when arrested is 'clean', they could possibly raid you to look for further
evidence. If you're a political station watch out for suspicious break-ins where nothing is stolen, the
Branch often do this. Get your story straight, get witnesses to write out their statements together,
make copies and give them to your solicitor.

Don't trust your solicitor too far, they sometimes say 'plead guilty' just to save themselves trouble, if
he/she starts getting cold feet get yourself a new one (they don't like this at all but it can be done). Get
your solicitor to ask for copies of the prosecutions witness statements in advance of the case and
make sure you see them. In court dress neatly and be polite to the bastard (magistrate) and the filth.
Have a good 'hard luck' story for your solicitor to tell, it's always good to say you're just getting
married, starting a new job etc., but don't say you have money or the fines will be bumped up higher. If
you're going to 'bend the truth' a little don't tell your solicitor you're doing it, and be sure friends
watching in court don't start laughing!

The DTI and police will lie anyway, more likely than not, get your witnesses to focus on these lies and
your solicitor to cross question them closely, especially any police witnesses, who are more stupid and
inexperienced in this kind of case.

Demonstrations outside the court are good publicity and can intimidate the magistrate if big
enough, but don't always help your case (e.g. if you're pleading 'dumb bystander' how come all these
people are so concerned about you?). If you want press, send out Press Releases at least a week in
advance, so the hacks can put it in their diaries, and phone sound with reminders the day before. Your
fine should be paid by the Bust Fund if at all possible. If not, extra costs should be divided up among
everyone in the station (always plead poverty and ask for time to pay). When you've been busted once
you shouldn't, ideally, work on the broadcasting end again, though you could still do lookout, backup,
monitoring etc., as second offenders normally get the maximum fine.

If you win the case, as quite often happens, have a good party! If you win there is also some
possibility, in theory of claiming the gear back, though this is much less likely under the new laws.

Ask your solicitor about it, and there's a chance get someone else, with some kind of receipt, to
apply for it, saying they'd bought it before the bust.

Some adverts:

Radio Support Group

To join Radio Support Group and get updates and development aid write to:

Radio Support Group

c/o Drowned Rat

Box 010

27 Stokes Croft

Bristol

Avon BS1 3PY

Free The Airwaves

BCM Box 1502

London WC1N 3XX

Radio Crimes is the name of the FTA bulletin, and will carry full technical updates on these designs, and
much more. To join FTA and receive the bulletin send £2 (for organizations: £10) to the address
above.

V. The KZAR
Story

If you can't afford the outrageous price-tag required to start a licensed radio station, if you've tired of
commercial alternative stations that play Nirvana ad nauseam, don't fret.

It's easy for you to take matters into your own hands. Try this recipe for making your own radio waves:
1) Know the right electronics equipment dealers in town, they'll hook you up with parts to make a
transmitter (about $50 per 5 watts: you'll probably want at least 20 watts); 2) Buy an antenna, a
microphone, maybe a filter, a mixer and a CD player; 3) Round up your friends, vote on a format, choose
a frequency, boost your power, then snub your nose at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
You owe it to yourself. After all, you broke the rules -- or, more exactly, the law.

This rebellious, and, when you add music, romantic stealing of the airwaves was played out by Christian
Slater in 1990's "Pump Up the Volume." In Salt Lake City recently, it's become radio reality on
Saturday nights at 11:30, sans the "young - man - with - something - to - say" attitude of the Hollywood
movie.

Promoting itself by way of flyers in Salt Lake City coffee shops, KZAR, or Zion Alternative Radio,
prides itself as a breed apart from "those commercial money-grubbing giants." That explains its
"measly" output power of 35 watts.

"After extensive research and help from listeners," so says the station's voice mail, four areas were
scouted for best reception. Guaranteeing that Salt Lake's upper-class won't be deprived of pirate radio,
KZAR comes in best in the Olympus Cove and East Benches area.

The other three are the Murray Area, the West Valley Area, and, naturally, the higher North Benches
and Capitol Area. If you want to listen to KZAR in domestic comfort, you've got to wire up your receiver
and string an antenna out the window. Otherwise, KZAR is radio for the road.

Nestled between KBYU (89.1) and KUER (90.1), KZAR seats its throne at 89.5 FM. Station manager
Dmitri Baughman (a pseudonym) chose a lower band because, reportedly, the FCC is more lenient on
pirate (unlicensed) broadcasters using the educational frequencies, as opposed to the higher frequencies of
commercial radio. Pirate radio is not a violation the FCC takes lightly. "They [pirate stations] are illegal.
The FCC has sole jurisdiction over airwaves and broadcast signals for the public domain," said Tom
Hora, public affairs officer for FCC's eastern California field office, which regulates Utah airwaves.

Recently, in California operators for the station Free Radio Berkeley were apprehended and fined
$20,000. Federal regulations governing radio stem from the Communication Act of 1934, which ruled
that the airwaves, unlike print media, are public, not private property. The United States isn't alone, as
Italy is the only country that doesn't crack down on free radio operators. Hora makes the point that
pirate broadcasters interfere with other stations' legitimate use, cost consumers money, and even
endanger lives.

"What if a commercial airline can't reach the control tower

because of a pirate frequency? It has to turn around and try again.

That costs the airline fuel, which is passed on to consumers," Hora says. "What if the pirate frequency
jams communication between police and firemen and they can't respond to an emergency?" he says with
a wild voice.

The FCC isn't even the least bit curious about why people broadcast illegally. Pirates are just a pain in
the neck. "Why do people shoplift? Why do people do things they shouldn't do? It's impossible to
determine," says FCC engineer Bill Zears.

Nationwide, the motives are as varied as the U.S. population.

Until recently, an Illinois man used his homemade station to broadcast jazz and black nationalist news
and opinions on such topics as police brutality. In Michigan, one couple used a transmitter to broadcast
anti-gay propaganda, and, of course, Neo-nazis get in on the act.

Overseas, the aim is more about music. English pirate station Caroline even led directly to the country's
first popular music station, BBC's Radio 1.

Baughman's motives are personal and political, not overtly

malicious or sociopathic. His first introduction to the idea was through the computer network, Internet.
Since then, he's been broadcasting on-and-off since late June. Understandably, Baughman declined an
in-person interview and photos.

"To be honest, I like to play DJ. It's a small movement and I wanted to be part of it. I'm pretty much
anti-government anyway," he says. Baughman and his group of "sandbox" radio enthusiasts, as he puts
it, have enough power to broadcast over the entire valley, but need a higher antenna, an item that's next
in line for purchase.

The listening menu is a loose "alternative" format that, disappointingly, often veers on the commercial,
especially on Chloe Devereaux's "Blood, Death, and Roses" segment of the broadcast. The The, New
Order and INXS are probably the last bands you'd expect to hear on a pirate station. They're easy
pickings on commercial radio, but KZAR is proud to bring them to you. Broadcasting into 4 a.m.,
however, the mix became more subversive: Meat Beat Manifesto, Sex Gang Children, and techno-rave
beats.

The best feature of KZAR is its news segment, chock full of enough conspiracy theories to make Oliver
Stone look like an amateur. News item: "The U.S. Government is using closed-captioned decoders
installed in TV sets to obtain classified information about American homes."

Pirate radio's national agenda reaches far above mere music, though. According to Baughman, its true
goal is to obtain FCC rights for micro-broadcasting licenses, more reasonable licensing costs, and get
FCC bureaucrats to tune in to the positive effects of small stations serving the community.

That will be a long time coming. Until then, Baughman and crew will turn on the transmitter every
Saturday night and claim a small piece of turf among Salt Lake City's 40-odd radio stations.

Other stations have yet to complain to the FCC about any signal interference.

"I really don't give it [pirate radio] much legal thought,"

Baughman says. "When something does happen and I do get caught, I'll worry about it then."

VI. The
Ramsey FM-10 micro-transmitter.

Here is a compilation of information about the Ramsey FM-10, and other BA1404 Stereo FM
broadcasters. Some of the modifications may make your BA1404 based broadcaster illegal to use on the
open airwaves in the US and Canada. Also it has been brought up that the stock Ramsey FM-10 kit may
exceed FCC power limits when used with a proper antenna.

Recommended Test Equipment

An SWR/Power meter is a giant help, a CB to 2 meter one will suffice. Power readings will not be
accurate, but can be useful for peaking. The most important part is the SWR meter, this is very important
when making an antenna.

A note on power meters: The above power meters are recommended because they are inexpensive and
most people that are interested in hacking a FM-10 have very limited funds. These are by no means
accurate, but they will give you some idea what is going on. If you can spend the money you can get an
accurate power meter that is designed for this band, but the cost is 10-15 times more.

A 50 ohm non inductive load is also very helpful, for low power applications a 50 ohm 1/4 or 1/2 watt
carbon resistor works well. This can be used to tune up your kit and amp without interfering with
anyone. Also note that you can run as much power you want, legally, as long is it doesn't radiate.

A VOM is also very helpful. It is worth the extra bucks and buy one with a frequency counter (if you
shop around, about $60-$70). Buy the one that covers audio to 20 MHz (or more). If you are serious
about electronics you need one of these!

Dummy load

Dummy loads are great for testing, without radiating a signal. In fact you can run as much power as
you want into one of these things legally!

Basically you want to create a non-inductive 50 ohm load. This can be done with regular carbon
resistors, or by buying pre built Amateur or CB radio loads. For low power ( &lt .5 watt ) an ethernet
terminator works well (check temperature when using if it gets very hot lower input power, if it is still
cool you may be able to go up to .75 watt.) Most CB loads use a 2 watt carbon 50 ohm resistor.

You can build your own, as wimpy or as sturdily as you want by running resistors in parallel to create
50 ohms. i.e., 2 100 ohm 1/4 watt resistors will create a 1/2 watt 50 ohm load...

Do not use 50 ohm wire wound resistors, they are not 50 ohms at radio frequencies.

Ramsey's Address

If your looking to purchase a FM-10 kit and can't find one locally try :

Ramsey Electronics, Inc.

793 Canning Parkway

Victor, New York 14564

Phone (716) 924-4560

FAX (716) 924-4555

Ramsey FM-10 70 mw output amplifier

Provides almost 9 db gain to bring the output power of the Ramsey FM-10 Stereo transmitter from 8
mw to 70 mw Not the best design, but all parts can be found at Radio Shack!

This thing can be built right on the underside of the FM-10 kit, C1 is the cap that currently goes to the
RCA ant jack, the 9k and the 220 ohm resistor have to be bought, note that if you cannot find 220 ohms
you can make one by using 2 440 ohm resistors in parallel, and that a 10k will work in place of the 9k
but yields poorer performance (-5%).

The MPS2222A is from Radio Shack part number 276-2009, use this part! If you substitute it for a
2N2222A you will get only half the gain. Be very careful to get the leads in the correct orientation!

The 2N4401 can be used in place of the MPS2222A with a little better performance, about 5 mw more.
The 2N4401 can be found at Radio Shack, too.

C2 is of the same value of C1, this is the one that goes to the on board antenna pad.

Important, the value for R1 that seems to be optimal is 220 ohms, but it is very close to the sat point, If
the amp seems noisy (interferes with the TV etc.) back this value off to 240 ohms. If you lower this
value below 205 ohms the power meter may read higher power but this will not be true, the transistor will
be spewing all kinds of junk and the power meter will mistake this for higher output (in reality the signal
we want will drop

considerably.)

After this modification the, effective range with a good antenna should be a little over double.

Ramsey PA-1 2-meter to 3-meter conversion mod

The Ramsey 2-meter amp (PA-1) can be converted for use on the FM broadcast band. The inductors L1
and L2 need to be changed to the following:

L1 - Should be replaced with a 1-turn 1/4" diameter coil, Identical to the stock L2 shown in the PA-1
manual.

L2 - Should be replaced with a 2 turn 1/4" diameter coil, one more turn than the above coil.

Tune up should be the same as in the PA-1 Manual. Note that a FM-10 kit cannot be used to drive a
PA-1 kit alone. The FM-10 kit doesn't put out enough power to turn on the PA-1 kit running class-c. So
you have two options. One, you can do the "biased on" (newer kits may call this class-b) modification
shown in the PA-1 manual. Doing this you can drive the PA-1 with a stock FM-10, yielding about 200-
300mw of output power. Or two, you can drive the PA-1 with the output of the 70 mw amp shown above
and get close to a watt of output power.

It should be noted here that running the PA-1 "biased on" (or class-b) produces a much cleaner output
signal than running the PA-1 class-c. Also that you can run the PA-1 "biased on" while driving it with
the 70 mw amp, but you will show slightly less gain than in class-c.

ANTENNAS

Antenna are the most important thing that you can do for extended range. A 1/4 wave ground plane
can be built using a UHF connector and 5 lengths of copper plated brazing rod (found at the local
welding shop). Works great and only cost $3 dollars to make.

Remember good antenna will improve you range much further than a good amp into a bad antenna. So
this should be your 1st project to increase your range.

Use the formulas out of your FM-10 manual 234/freq=length of rod.

Example : 234/88Mhz = 2.66 feet * 12 in/feet = 31.9" -or-

234/108Mhz= 2.17 feet * 12 in/feet = 26"

Insert the 4 ground plane rods in the 4 holes of the UHF connector, stick them through about 1/4 inch
and solder. Solder the radiator in the top of the UHF connector (you may have to grind it a bit to fit.)
Then bend the ground plane rods to a 45 degree angle to the radiator. This makes a very effective
antenna, just connect with a 50 ohm CB cable to your amplified Ramsey, stick the antenna in a tree or in
another high place and you should have 1 miles of solid coverage (when using the above amp.).

If you have an SWR meter you can cut the rods a little longer and start clipping the ends off a little
until you get the best SWR reading.

Be careful when you bend the brazing rod, don't break the connector. Grab the rod right below the
connector with a pair of vice-grips and bend the brazing rod at that point.

Try not to have anything metal near the radiator, this will effect the radiation pattern. The radiation
pattern should look a lot like a deformed doughnut surrounding the radiator

On The Road

Old magnet mount CB antennas can make great mobile antennas, simply take the base load out of them
and cut the radiator to 1/4 wave length.

If you need a longer radiator than the one that comes with the antenna use the above mentioned brazing
rod.

This antenna works great! It is better than a dipole and you can drive to a high, optimal location for
your broadcasts (and you can see the vans coming for miles. Also with this setup you need very little
coax cable. Line loss using RG-58u can be killer at 100MHz. You could also try a 5/8 wave length
antenna, this would give you 2+db gain, or almost 2 times power gain on transmit.

Filter design for FM Radio Transmitters.

It is very important to have a clean signal. 99% of all people who get busted for illegal transmitting is
that the neighbors complain about interference. Most of this interference is caused by harmonics. Filters
cut down these spurs. Don't draw attention to yourself, be clean, and use a filter.

When you amplify a signal, you get unwanted by-products these are called harmonics. The show up at
multiples of your starting frequency. For example, if you amplify a 50MHz signal you may get spurious
signals on 100MHz, 150MHz, 200MHz, 250MHz... If you interfere with your neighbors TV, the local
fire department, or anyone else, you are just asking for trouble. If you are only on the FM Band with a
clean signal, you will hardly be noticed.

The tough part in the above is winding the coils. 3t of #12 wire 1/2" diameter should be about .12 uh. 4t
is .17 uh. (but ugh, #12 wire is big stuff). You could just use molded inductors, these work well. Try to
use fixed value caps, or fixed value with small 5pF trimmers. The latter works well when you have a
spectrum analyzer available for tuning the filters.

It won't attenuate the harmonics as much as the other two designs but it uses standard off the shelf
parts. The inductor is one of those molded units that looks like a resistor so you can make this very
small. You may stack these things to make a better filter. Each stage will knock the 2nd harmonic
down about 15db.

Use the above cap values depending on which frequency range you want to operate at. i.e.. if you run
87-90 use the 88MHz values, 90-103 use 102MHz values, and above that use 107MHz values. Try to use
fixed value parts!

[Also of interest is that the FM-10 puts out about 8-9mw and the 2nd harmonic is -25db off the
fundamental (frequency we are broadcasting on). The FM-4 Kit by Ramsey puts out 130mw and the 2nd
harmonic is only -12db off the fundamental, which means the 2nd harmonic of the FM-4 is about as
powerful as the FM-10. db is log10, i.e. 3db is 2 times 6db is 4 times...]

FM-10 Myths

There have been several myths about the FM-10 kit, the most prevalent are :

1) The FM-10 puts out 100mw of power. This is not true, or at least not true for common Ramsey FM-
10's. They put out between 8 and 12mw when driven with a 12 volt supply. (Note: there has been several
revisions of the FM-10, it is possible that the original version put out more power, but that is highly
unlikely since it would require another amplifier stage.) Also the FM-10 is the only low cost kit with an
amplifier stage. Most others have power outputs in the fraction of a mw area.

2) The FM-10's output can be cranked up by reducing the value of R9. This, like the above is not true.
R9 and R10 are optimized for maximum output and greatest harmonic suppression at 12 volts. There
are much better ways of getting more output power than to mess with this output stage. Lowering the
value of R9 will most likely degrade the FM-10's performance and cause lots of interference.

FM-10 Improvements

Stereo Pilot Mod

One of the first problems experienced with the FM-10 is difficulty in getting the stereo pilot to operate
correctly. One solution is to replace C7 and C8 with a 38KHz crystal, this works the best and is
recommended. If you cannot find a 38KHz crystal, you can make your life a whole lot easier with a
couple part changes. As indicated on the Ramsey schematic, about 110pF is necessary to tune the
oscillator. The components supplied to achieve this are a small fixed value capacitor (C7) and a slightly
larger value trimmer (C8). Since proper setting of the trimmer occurs within a very small 'window' (about
5% of the trimmers range), it can bet difficult or impossible to adjust the pilot to 19KHz and have it stay
put. This can be cured by increasing the value of c7 to 100pF and replacing c8 with a 6-50pF trimmer
(Radio Shack #272-1340); a 5-30pF trimmer will do the trick. The RS trimmer will not fit the holes in
the pc board; one needs to cut the leads off a spare resistor and solder them to the legs of the trimmer
(just use bits of wire) to mount it on the component side of the board.

On a 2nd note: Replace c7 with a 68pF cap and it is much easier to tune a rock solid 19KHz at the test
point.

NOTE: Ramsey now includes a crystal with all FM-10 kits. Owners of the old kits can contact Ramsey
for an upgrade kit, which includes a crystal.

Remove C7 and C8, replace with 38KHz crystal and 10pF cap. Note that the 10pF cap and the crystal
are running series and the old cap setup is running in parallel.

Note: there have been good and bad reports on using the Epson crystal from digi-key. People say the
crystal is quite delicate, and in at least one case the experimenter destroyed the crystal.

In one of the positive cases, C1's 10pF cap was replaced by 2 22pF caps run in parallel, this yielded a
rock solid stereo.

Treble Boost Mod-

Treble boost (pre-emphasis) improvement. The FM-10 appears to have been designed by someone
outside the United States since it operates at the European audio standard of 50 microseconds. Receivers
in the US are set up for 75 microsecond de-emphasis. R3 and R6 determine the time constant for the pre-
emphasis curve. Replacing them with 75K ohm resistors (standard value 68K ohm is close enough) will
result in improved audio response.

A much better pre-emphasis/input circuit is shown in the July 1992 issue of "Radio Electronics". Not
only do they use 75K ohm resistors in there pre-emphasis, but they filter stray RF signals by inserting a
.001 cap between pin 1 (of the BA1404) and ground, and pin 18 and ground.

It has been noted that the above mod may actually cause distortion on cheaper stereo receivers, since
they were mass produced for the world market, they were designed for the European audio standard,
which Japan and other Asian nations use too. Try it out, let me know what works for you.

Anti-Drift Mod

There has been quite a bit of discussion on the FM-10's frequency stability. Complaints that digital
receivers cannot lock onto the FM-10's signal for any great length of time. The below mod has been used
with good results using a N750 negative temperature compensated disc, but Mylar or Polystyrene caps are
even better.

The FM-10 was designed to be inexpensive and cost-saving measures with components are inevitable.
Disc ceramic capacitors are less expensive than silver-mica caps, and also much less stable. Simply
replace c16 with a silver-mica, tantalum or negative temperature compensated disc (say anywhere from
N150 to N750) cap of the same value.

Sources

The following is a list of sources for items used for modifications, replacement parts, or other kits and
equipment used in FM radio transmitting:

BA1404s and other FM Broadcaster kits can be found at :

D.C. Electronics

Phone: 1-800-467-7736 &amp 1-800-423-0070

Fax:1-602-994-1707

They sell BA1404s for $2 a piece, seems to be the best deal going. Also they Sell 38KHz crystals for
$5.99, which is also a fair deal, the crystals are tiny ones like the digi-key ones, but are a different brand
and work without problems.

38KHz Crystals can be obtained by calling :

Digi-Key at 1-800-DIGI-KEY.

38.000 KHz by Epson America, Digi-Key part No. is SE3314

(see notes on crystal mod on using this crystal) Note that

this is a cylinder type crystal and is delicate. You are probably better off getting the 38KHz crystals from
D.C. Electronics.)

Panaxis Productions makes some very high quality FM transmitters. The last word in Transmitting,
tons of kits.

Panaxis Productions

PO Box 130

Paradise, CA 95967-0130.

(916)534-0417

Catalogs are $2, well worth it, a must have item.

A little taste of there catalog :

MMC1 Macromod Compander for 2:1 compression

Plans $12, PCB $18, P+P 26.50, Full kit $87

SG High performance stereo generator

Plans $15, PCB $13.5, P+P 26.50, Full kit $105

FME PLL FM exciter

Plans $17.5, PCB $15, P+P 24.50, Full kit $129

More expensive than a FM-10 but much higher performance.

A company called Progressive Concepts sells plans for a 88MHz to 108MHz amp. The power curves
show that 12mw in will yield 2.5 watts, but can be driven harder for up to 12 watts.

Plans only in U.S., $16 (a bit spendy, ouch!)

Progressive Concepts

1313 N. Grand Ave. #291

Walnut, CA. 91789

If your looking to purchase a FM-10 kit (or a PA-1 kit) and can't find one locally try :

Ramsey Electronics, Inc.

793 Canning Parkway

Victor, New York 14564

Phone (716) 924-4560

FAX (716) 924-4555

Should be $29

The makers of the infamous BA1404 :

Rohm Corporation

Rohm Electronics Division

3034 Owen DR

Jackson Business Park

Antioch, TN 37013

PH: (615)-641-2020 (ask for someone who deals with the BA1404)

FAX: (615)-641-2022

Also they have:

PO Box 1399

Antioch, TN 37011-1399

Miscellaneous:

The 2SC2570 is supposedly replaceable with an ECG10. The MRF901 can also be used as a
replacement, although it is tough to mount. Try mounting it on the bottom of the pc board and
connecting the whip antenna pad to ground plane. MPS901s seem to replace the 2SC2570 directly. They
use the same case, but check the pin-outs. MPS918s work well also.

The MRF239 can be used as direct replacement for the Ramsey 2 meter PA-1 kit. Cost is around
$14.

Newark also has the 38 KHz crystals for $2.90

VII. A TV
Transmitter

For some time now it has been possible to construct a clandestine television station, which you can
operate from your Telecommando Lair, or modify or Mobile Media Guerrilla campaigns.

This device has been named the Snow Box, due to its cool nature, and the snow seen on blank
television channels waiting to be commandeered.

To put together a TV station you will need this stuff:

1) A VCR or Camcorder with video or RF outputs

2) A Ham Radio 6-meter Band Linear amplifier

This boosts the RF signal from the VCR for broadcasting. The Linear Amp should have a bandwidth of 6
MHz for best results. A cable television RF distribution amplifier may also be used.

3) Coaxial cable with UHF connectors

(Connects the Linear Amp to the Antenna)

4) A cable-TV patch cable with an F-connector and a UHF connector. (To connect the RF signal to the
Linear Amp) (F-connectors are the small ones used with cable TV) (UHF connectors are the large ones
used for Ham Radio)

Likely places to get the linear amplifier, connectors and cables is a Ham Radio swapmeet, a Ham club
newsletter's classified ads, a Buy-Sell-Trade paper like The Recycler, or at a store specializing in Ham
gear.

RF modulators are available at specialty video stores, or major VCR dealers.

The antenna is set up much like a clothesline with the wires tethered straight out horizontally. The
outer insulators are used to isolate the antenna from the tether lines, which should be rope or nylon cords
for good results. The inner insulator isolates a gap between the two long wires of the antenna.

The length of the wires used for the antenna is critical. Look up the length in feet for the channel you
want to use in the table below &amp make each of the two long wires that length.

As a rule of thumb, a wire half-wave antenna's length in feet is equal to 468 divided by the frequency in
MHz.

For Further information: Look in the ARRL Handbook published by the American Radio Relay League
for detailed plans &amp theory for antennas, transmitters &amp linear amplifiers. The info in that book
can be used for setting up an underground AM or FM radio station.

Uses for a TV Clandestine Station:

Public Education: Make a videotape of each step in the process of constructing your transmitter. Show
this tape in your broadcasts, "For informational purposes only", of course.

Short-burst zipping: From a fixed or mobile base of operation show short snippets of graffiti-like
computer graphics, quick subliminal messages, images &amp suggestions, or brief phreaker manifestos.
Commercials are an opportune time to break into TV broadcasts.

Live call-in shows: Using a Cheese Box, or other device for receiving untraceable phone calls and a
video camera do a live call-in show. Encourage people to call in using Red, Blue, and other phreaking
boxes.

Cable TV Piracy: With modifications it may be possible to feed the power RF signal directly into a
cable TV system, overriding cablecasts or commandeering unused channels.

Mobile Operation: Using storage batteries and a 110-volt inverter the transmitter may be modified for
mobile use to avoid detection by the FCC during long broadcasts. Battery operated mobile linear amps
and portable camcorders are also available.

* ASSEMBLY: Watch it with static around the TMOS transistor. It is VERY sensitive. If there's any
static voltage difference between the drain or gate and the source, you can toast it! Keep it in the static-
proof bag in which it was shipped until you're ready to install it as the LAST component. Then solder the
source tabs first, then the gate (opposite diagonal tab) and

Mount the TMOS flange to a metal box with some heatsink compound. Ground your PCB to the same
cabinet.

* TESTING: Connect the output to a dummy load which can handle the power level you'll be generating.
Set the trimpot at mid-range and apply your 12 or 24V. At this point, the power transistor shouldn't get
warm until you turn the pot up more. If it does start to warm up, turn the pot down a bit until the
temperature remains the same or lowers. DO NOT adjust past this point. Now feed your RF signal to the
amp's input. Use C3 (tuning) and C4 (load) to adjust for maximum output. You may also have to
readjust R2 for the best reading. Keep an eye on the meter for sudden jumps in output - this shouldn't
happen.

* TROUBLESHOOTING: If tuning is erratic, the amp is probably going into self-oscillation which can
be caused by insufficient grounding, bypassing of the power supply leads, too long of input or output
wires, or too high a bias.

* PARTS: Contact "RF Parts" at 619-744-0728 for the transistor you choose. Ask them for their latest
flyer, too. It's free. Your local electronics supplier other than Radio Shack ought to have everything else
you'll need (at least mine does!). If not, try "Mouser Electronics" at 800-346-6873 and get their free

This is a vertically polarized omnidirectional free space antenna which offers approximately 1.8dB of
gain. It has a radiation efficiency 50% better than a ground-plane antenna due to its low radiation angle,
it is unobtrusive, and has no ground-plane radials - therefore low wind resistance.

Why Slim Jim? Well this stems from its slender construction and the use of a 'J' type matching stub (J
integrated matching = JIM) that facilitates feeding the antenna at the base thus overcoming and
problems of interaction between feeder and antenna. The feed impedance is 50 ohms.

Why is the Slim Jim so much more efficient than the popular 5/8 wave or other ground plane antennas,
despite the latter's claimed 3dB over a dipole? The Slim Jim vertical angle of radiation is almost parallel
to ground so maximum radiation is where it is needed: straight out and all round. (The included diagram
illustrates that the vertical angle from the SJ is 8 degrees, while the common 5/8th wave ground plane
antenna is about 32 degrees.) With all ground planes, including those with radials an entire wavelength
long, the vertical angle radiation is tilted upwards at an angle of 30 degrees or more.

This gives the Slim Jim a gain over a 5/8th wave of 6dB when measured parallel to the ground!

OPERATION:

Basically it is an end-fed folded dipole operated vertically. The matching stub provides a low
impedance feed point (50 ohms) at the base and couples to the antenna section at high impedance at one
end. As with all folded dipoles, the currents in each leg are in phase, whereas in the matching stub they
in phase opposition, so little or no radiation occurs from this. (See diagram for current direction
arrows.) Correctly matched, the VSWR (Voltage Standing Wave Ratio) will be much less than 1.5:1,
and remains so across the band.

CONSTRUCTION:

The Slim Jim should be constructed from 1/2" copper pipe. The bends are made with soldered 90
degree copper elbows. A slip sleeve made from copper can be added to the element above the gap for
tuning purposes, although the average length of the gap and spacing between the elements is 3" at
72MHz and 1" at 220MHz. No part of the antenna should be grounded to the tower or mast. The
recommended mount is the use of PVC pipe and PVC pipe "T's."

Make sure the space between the tower or mast and the antenna is one "freespace" 1/4 wavelength.

TESTING:

Stand upright (on a railing or something, but clear of metal water tanks, drainpipes, etc.) and fit the
coaxial cable to the antenna with some crocodile clips. Attach about 2 inches up from the bottom and
check the VSWR. Adjust the clips up or down to get the best match (mine managed 1.2:1), mark where
they are to go, remove the clips, and solder the coax directly. Use the copper sleeve, if added, for any
necessary tuning.

X. A 15 Watt
Phase Locked FM Transmitter

This simple little phase-locked transmitter is both easy to build, and extremely stable. It will not
frequency drift, like the other transmitters presented in this book.

The frequency is set by first adjusting the variable inductor in the oscillator circuit to near the desired
frequency. After the oscillator is close, program the dip switches with the desired frequency.

The dip switches are programmed with a binary representation of the operating frequency. For
example, if the frequency is 88.1 Mhz, you would take the binary of 881, which is 000011101. A one
means that the switch is on the 'ON' position. Note that the right most bit is 1024, and the left most is
1.

PLL Transmitter 1

PLL Transmitter 2

PLL Transmitter 3

PLL Transmitter 4

XI. The
BA1404 stereo transmitter IC

Around 1988, the Rohm company introduced a revolutionary IC. This IC has a complete stereo
generator and transmitter on chip. This allows one to build extremely small and light-weight
transmitters.

The main drawback of the BA1404 is that it only has an output of 8 to 10 mW. This can be amplified.
See the FM-10 section.

Following are complete specifications for the '1404, as well as a couple good schematics for
constructing a transmitter that is similar to the Ramsey FM-10.

BA1404 Specs 1

BA1404 Specs 2

BA1404 Specs 3

BA1404 Specs 4

BA1404 Specs 5

BA1404 Specs 6

XII. Other
Books Available from RF Consulting:

Cellular Telephone Technology

This book covers, in depth, all aspects of the inner workings of cellular telephone service, from
programming instructions, to detailed protocol descriptions. Complete frequency charts and a
comprehensive glossary of terms are also included. $19.95 delivered.

Computer and Telephone 'Hacking'

This extensive work covers every facet of computer and telephone hacking, from cracking passwords, to
building telephone 'color' boxes. Several popular computer operating systems are covered, as well as
telephone switching system operation. This book is a must-have for the serious computer and telephone
enthusiast. $19.95 delivered.

Scanning and Two-Way Radio Techniques

Everything from finding police and fire frequencies, to operational theory are covered in this informative
book. General frequency lists are given, as well as extended frequency modifications for popular scanners.
This book contains everything for the serious scanner hobbyist. $19.95 delivered.